Title: FEMINIST ART
1 2FEMINISM
- Background and Quick Facts
- The feminist movement refers to the efforts and
accomplishments made internationally in the name
of equality (politically, socially, economically
and culturally).
3FEMINIST ART
- Background and Quick Facts
- Feminist art began in the 1960s and flourished
throughout the 1970s . - Feminist Art has been called "the most
influential international movement of any during
the postwar period" 1 and its effects continue
to the present. - Feminist art also attempts to change the
foundation for the production and reception of
contemporary art. - Feminist Art seeks greater visibility for women
in art and art history.
4FEMINIST ART
- Gentischelli,
- Judith Slaying
- Holofernes.
- 1611-1612
5FEMINIST ART
Mary Cassat, The Childs Bath. 1893,Oil .
6FEMINIST ART
Frida Kahlo, Self Portrait with Cropped Hair
, oil on canvas, 1940.
7Linda Nochlin, for example, read Black Iris III
as a "morphological metaphor" for female
genitalia, insisting that the connection is
"immediate", "concrete", and "that the two
meanings are almost interchangeable." In this
merger of botany and anatomy, Nochlin found
reflection of "the unity of the feminine and the
natural order"
FEMINIST ART
Georgia OKeeffe, Black Irises III, 1926
8Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party, 1979.
9FEMINIST ART
10Krugers work merges found photographs from
existing sources with aggressive text that
addresses the struggle for power and control. Her
trademark slogans question notions of feminism,
consumerism, individual autonomy and desire.
Interestingly enough her black-and-white images
are appropriated from the mainstream magazines
that sell the very ideas she questions!
FEMINIST ART
You Are a Captive Audience Barbara Kruger
11FEMINIST ART
12FEMINIST ART
13"The work is what it is and hopefully its seen
as feminist work, or feminist-advised work
Cindy Sherman
14Decode/ read this image in groups using a
feminist critical lens. Lets discuss!
15Jacques Louis David, The Oath of the Horatii
1786.
16Decode/ read this image in groups using a
feminist critical lens. Lets discuss!
17Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles DAvignon,
1907.
18Decode/ read this image in groups using a
feminist critical lens. Lets discuss!
19Joyce Weiland, Reason Over Passion, 1968.
20- Why Address Feminist Issues?
Art can question the world in powerful
ways... Female students can learn by using a
critical lens Male students can learn by using a
critical lens