The Guardian (USA)

It’s 2023 – and women are still being told to cut their art down to size

- Katy Hessel

Last week I was speaking with an artist – highly regarded and in her 60s – when she began telling me about a recent incident with a male curator. She had been helping him install a show at a major institutio­n when he realised the measuremen­ts for a large work of hers were off – he’d failed to double check the dimensions of the gallery. As a result, he asked if she could chop off a section of her large-scale artwork so it could fit. Understand­ably outraged, she declined, and the work didn’t end up in the show. But she also wondered whether the curator would have asked the same of a male artist – to butcher his own work to make it accommodat­e the space?

Women accommodat­e to a fault. But why have we been made to feel like this: guilty if we take up space; unpleasant if everything we do is not done with grace; demanding if we ask for what we want? It’s shocking to think that in 2023, the questionin­g of women’s authority – and the disbelief in what we are capable of – is still rife.

In historical terms, it’s partly because society hasn’t presented us with a vision in which women own certain spaces. Take a portrait commission­ed to show the 36 founding members of the Royal Academy of Arts in London, of whom two were women, Angelica Kauffman and Mary Moser. Instead of painting them alongside the men who were all decked out in suits and studying a nude model, the painter Johann Zoffany reduced them to two almost unrecognis­able portrait busts in the corner of the room. (The Royal Academy did not admit women to the lifedrawin­g studio until the 1890s.)

Women’s work has also been hidden from view. In 2019, a large version of the Last Supper by the nun-artist Plautilla Nelli from around 1568 went on view at the refectory of Santa Maria Novella, Florence – its first outing.

Women have been crowded out not only on museum walls, but also in the places where they have made their work. When Lee Krasner shared a home with her husband, Jackson Pollock, in Springs, Long Island, her studio was confined to the spare bedroom, while he had the sprawling barn. And when winter came, she was the one forced to relocate to the living room.

Then there are the times women’s works haven’t even survived. At the 1939 World’s Fair in New York City, a 16foot-high sculpture stood in its centre. Elegantly shaped like a harp, Lift Every Voice and Sing depicted 12 singing figures in floor-length robes standing in the palm of God’s hand, and a kneeling child. The work, by Augusta Savage, was commission­ed to show the contributi­on to music by African Americans. But, despite the national press coverage it earned, it was destroyed after the fair due to an inability (or lack of will) to fund its storage. What impact would this work have had on future generation­s if it had been preserved?

This story makes me think about how many other works have been destroyed because they were created by, or depicted, people regarded as unimportan­t, while the works that have remained reinforce a narrative about the greatness of white men. The author Kate Mosse pointed out in her book Warrior Queens and Quiet Revolution­aries that there are more statues in the UK of men named John than there are statues of women, and in Edinburgh there are more statues of animals than named women.

Last year, when I interviewe­d the American artist Amy Sherald – who rose to fame after painting the presidenti­al portrait of the first lady Michelle Obama, the first African American woman to do so – she recalled the power of seeing African Americans represente­d in art as a little girl: “I remember thinking, I wonder what my life would feel like if every single statue that I ever walked by … in all these different public spaces, looks like me?”

How different our lives would be if we saw ourselves reflected on museum walls and in public spaces. Representa­tion is key because seeing something created by someone that looks like you empowers you, makes you feel part of the conversati­on, and encourages you to achieve the same things as them. But it also teaches us how to treat and respect those in society who may seem different from us. Because despite the progress of showing women’s work today, it is still being sidelined, delimited, and asked to be reduced in size. Any art or anyone is worthy of taking up space and we must go out of our way to accommodat­e that, no matter our gender or background.

 ?? ?? Destroyed … Augusta Savage at work in 1939. Photograph: Manuscript­s and Archives Division, The New York Public Library
Destroyed … Augusta Savage at work in 1939. Photograph: Manuscript­s and Archives Division, The New York Public Library
 ?? ?? Lost impact … Augusta Savage in 1937. Photograph: Bettmann Archive
Lost impact … Augusta Savage in 1937. Photograph: Bettmann Archive

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