She was one of 10
women painters exhibited at the United Nations» «Ingredients for Peace Celebration» held in New York in March 2001.
Not exact matches
It seems clear, to take France in the 19th century as an example, a country which probably had a larger proportion of
women artists than any other — that is to say, in terms of their percentage in the total number of artists
exhibiting in the Salon — that «
women were not accepted as professional
painters.»
A member of the Michigan Watercolor Society, the Michigan Academy of Arts, the Detroit Society of
Women Painters, and the Grosse Pointe Artists, she
exhibited her paintings in New York and had one - person shows in Michigan and Ohio.
Recent Art News - Texas Week of 06/12/11 Art Review: Esteban Vicente: The Patient Teacher -
Painter — Front Row Art Review: A Violent Memorial at The MAC — FrontRow Building a Better Texas Biennial — Glasstire The Pietà Behind the Couch — NYTimes Recent Art News - National - International Week of 06/12/11 Picasso's Art Inspiring
Woman — CBS News: Sunday Morning [Video] Jerry Saltz on Kara Walker's Two Latest
Exhibits — NYMag Are strong words enough to support dissidents?
Indeed, a recent Netflix documentary about Herrera titled The 100 Years Show saw the Cuban - American abstract
painter recall how she was told by gallery owners — female themselves — that she couldn't
exhibit her work at their venues because she was a
woman.
Their work is
exhibited at Eigen + Art's stand alongside
painters who hark back to the German Romantic era — most notably Martin Eder, whose paintings of bloodied, embattled
women dressed in armour are a comment on the tribulations of contemporary feminism; and Jörg Herold, who paints crepuscular scenes as mournful as any Caspar David Friedrich.
Nashville based sculptor and
painter, Loretta A. Kaufman, is one of 37 artists selected to
exhibit their work in the National Association of
Women Artists» New Members Exhibition.
Inspired by Emile de Antonio's era - defining 1972 documentary film «
Painters Painting»,
Women Painting is an
exhibit, video...
Her work has been
exhibited and won awards in numerous national and regional juried shows including: Academic Artists Association (Best in Show 1999), Allied Artists of America, American Artists Processional League, Audubon Artists, Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art Club, Connecticut Pastel Society, Connecticut
Women Artists, Mattatuck Museum, New Britain Museum of American Art, Oil
Painters of America, Pastel Society of America, Rye Arts Center and Salmagundi Non-Members Open.
Carmen Herrera (b. 1915, Havana) One Cuba's first abstract
painters, Herrera has
exhibited widely in solo and group shows, including El Espíritu latinoamericano: Arte y artistas en los Estados Unidos, 1920 - 1970, which traveled widely in the United States in 1988 and 1989, and Crossing Borders: Contemporary Art by Latin American
Women at the College of New Rochelle, N.Y., in 1996.
The letter writer, one David Hass of northwest London, notes that the reviewer's rundown of
women painters in New York in the 1950s omits a certain Dorothy Heller, who, according to Hass (I wonder what his source is), was once named by Clement Greenberg as «the finest
woman painter in America,» adding that she
exhibited with the Tibor de Nagy, Poindexter, and Betty Parsons Galleries.
The
exhibit features the paintings of Hyneman a notable
painter in the 19th century whose work often included
women set amid the backdrop of New York City monuments.