Not exact matches
«The
Female Gaze, Part II: Women Looking at Men,» a group show that runs at Cheim & Read through September 2, is as ambitious in scope as it is in ideology, showcasing work
by a wide
range of
artists — including Tracey Emin, Alice Neel,... Read More
This collaborative programme led
by Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art (CFCCA) brings together five distinct art organisations across the UK, to show a diverse
range of art works and new commissions from some of the most exciting
female artists working in mainland China.
It
ranges from the NMWA's women only collection and exhibition - programme to an entire wing of the Brooklyn Museum being dedicated to feminist art; there's also The Metropolitan Museum of Art's decision to show work
by lesser - known
artists like Helen Torr and Elizabeth Catlett that has never been on view in «Reimagining Modernism: 1900 — 1950» (the rehang of their modern art collection); and there's the recent acquisition
by the Tate of a painting
by Mary Beale, who is regarded as Britain's first professional
female artist.
Together, these works show a
range of studio practices
by female artists working in the South within the language of abstraction, and highlights the breadth of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art's Permanent Collection.
Featuring a
range of events from poetry evenings with Gala Mukomolova and Liz Dosta, to a dance performance
by Natalie Lamonte, The Whitney Houston Biennial brings together
female voices to counter the art world's lack of representation, as well as written tributes to the women that have shaped and inspired each exhibiting
artist.
Featuring more than 40 works
by modern
artists ranging from Mary Cassatt to Georgia O'Keeffe who paved the way for future generations of professional women
artists, Modern Women at PAFA presents paintings and sculptures
by over 20
female artists whose works explore the following themes: motherhood and beauty; the natural landscape; self - portraiture; women in their community; women illustrators; and modern women in motion.
Providing new perspective on vital
female contributions to art history across mediums, genres, and periods, the exhibition schedule is anchored
by major solo exhibitions of work
by Laura Owens, Ida O'Keeffe, and Berthe Morisot and showcases a
range of significant works
by female artists in the Museum's collection.
The
artist developed a style in her large - scale works that challenges a traditional linear art history; these works were influenced
by a wide
range of images from different cultures, including techniques from Persian miniature painting, studies on the
female body and subjectivities, and science fiction.
The work on display
by female artists indicates the extensive
range of the exhibition: Hannah Wilke (who died that year), whose autobiographical works dealt directly with
female iconography as well as the effect of cancer on her own body; the performative, body - based work of Cheryl Donegan, referencing both video and gestural painting; the more traditional yet highly stylised and idealised portraits of Elizabeth Peyton, and the critical performance and media work of Coco Fusco.
The SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT has presented major surveys dedicated to radical turn - of - the - century Austrian art, to pioneering artistic positions
ranging from Expressionism and Dadaism to the Surrealist object art
by Dalí and Man Ray, as well as dealt for the first time with
female artists of the Impressionist movement.
By contrast, at the Art Gallery of Alberta, the Rooms and, especially, the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, solo shows by female artists were much higher, ranging from 45 % to almost 70 % of the galleries» exhibiting history since 201
By contrast, at the Art Gallery of Alberta, the Rooms and, especially, the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, solo shows
by female artists were much higher, ranging from 45 % to almost 70 % of the galleries» exhibiting history since 201
by female artists were much higher,
ranging from 45 % to almost 70 % of the galleries» exhibiting history since 2013.
New in April is a print show at Islip Art Museum revealing the
range of printing techniques used
by female artists.
The exhibition spotlights the diverse
range of American art that was exhibited with nearly 40 works of various media
by 36 American
artists, including several notable
female artists.