Saturday, March 31, 2007

WACK


WACK: ART AND THE FEMINIST REVOLUTION: 1965-1980

http://www.moca.org/wack/













This exhibition is going to be amazing! From March 4th until July 16th 2007 the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA will be hosting a wide arrange of events and lectures. Lectures include Lucy Lippard (author of Pink Glass Swan: Selected Feminist Essays on Art), Lorraine O'Grady, and a book signing with Judy Chicago, an amazing feminist artist and was also featured in this season's "Bitch" magazine. On March 3rd the opening consisted of a performance by JD Samson and Johanna Fateman of Le Tigre! So if you're in Southern California you don't want to miss this. If you can't make it to the exhibition, at least check out the website. It has plenty of videos and podcasts and photographs of the artworks. ENJOY!


During the late 1960s and early ’70s, feminism fundamentally changed contemporary art practice, critiquing its assumptions and radically altering its structures and methodologies. WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution is predicated on the notion that gender was and remains fundamental to the organization of culture, and that a contemporary understanding of the feminist in art must necessarily look to the late 1960s and ‘70s. While the American feminist art movement coalesced in the late 1960s in the United States and is embedded within the exhibition, this international survey of 120 artists, activists, filmmakers, writers, teachers, and thinkers necessarily moves beyond the now-canonical list of American feminist artists to include women of other geographies, formal approaches, socio-political alliances, and critical and theoretical positions. This exhibition argues for simultaneous feminisms internationally that together and retrospectively can be viewed as the most influential movement in postwar contemporary art.

The exclamatory title of the exhibition is intended to recall the bold idealism that characterized the feminist movement during its second wave, as well as the acronyms of activist groups that protested institutions of all kinds beginning in the late 1960s. For many of the artists in WACK!, feminism often coexisted with political engagement on other fronts such as race, class, and sexual orientation that, at times, superseded feminism as the dominant discourse within which they preferred to situate their work. Many artists’ imagery is explicitly feminist in its foregrounding of the body, personal narrative, and biography. While some artists embraced a conceptual idiom, others explored family histories and narratives of subjugation; still others worked abstractly and obliquely exploring themes of gender. For artists working in cultural contexts where there was no language of feminism or feminist art, their work can retrospectively be read in feminist terms.

The themes that structure the exhibition and publication were imagined in various ways. Some function historically while others are formally inspired, some according to the ways that women artists organized in order to maximize the impact of the statements they were trying to make. This brochure is intended as a guide, providing one narrative through the exhibition and a tool for organizing the artwork you will see and experience.

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