Muscat Daily

TOO LITTLE TOO LATE?

US museum targets gender gap by acquiring only works by women

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I think it's a radical and timely decision in 2020 to take the bull by the horns and do this Christophe­r Bedford

An American museum has come up with a bold way to boost women's participat­ion in the arts: this year it will only acquire works by females.

The Baltimore Museum of Art, in the state of Maryland, is best known for housing the largest public collection of Matisse works anywhere in the world.

Late last year it attracted major press attention with word that in 2020 it would only purchase works by women, drawing both praise and skepticism.

"I think it's a radical and timely decision in 2020 to take the bull by the horns and do this," the museum's director Christophe­r Bedford told AFP.

This year marks the 100th anniversar­y of the adoption of the 19th Amendment to the US constituti­on, which gave women the right to vote.

It also gave the museum pause to do some soul-searching: of its 95,000 works, only four per cent are by women artists, says Bedford.

"We're an institutio­n largely built by women leaders," he said.

The museum's first director was a woman. And it is largely thanks to two women - the Cone sisters - and their

friendship with Henri Matisse that the mus -eum boasts such a rich collection of works by the French artist.

Centuries of discrimina­tion

So the museum will spend US$2.5mn this year on works by women. It will also reorganise several of its rooms to showcase the work of women and offer 20-odd exhibits of works by female artists. It will, however, continue to accept donations of art done by men.

The BMA is hardly alone in having such a disproport­ionate amount of art by men. The fame of artists such as Elisabeth Vigee Le Brun, Frida Kahlo and Louise Bourgeois is an exception to the rule.

A study published last year by the scientific journal Plos-One found that in 18 major American museums, 87 per cent of the artists whose works were on exhibit were men. And from 2008 to 2018, of 260,470 works acquired by 26 big museums, only 11 per cent were by women, according to a study by the company Artnet and the podcast In Other Words.

This is the fruit of centuries-old discrimina­tion that can be either intentiona­l or not, said Bedford.

"And unless you call out that habit and consciousl­y find a way to work against it, then you will never have a properly equitable museum," he said.

‘A tiny step’

While the museum's initiative has been welcomed by many as a good first step, not everyone is sold on it.

Teri Henderson, a curator based in Baltimore, said she questions the museum's use of the word ‘radical’ to describe its decision to acquire only art by women for a year. "I have observed that organisati­ons and institutio­ns use the word 'radical' as a sort of buzzword without actually implementi­ng any programmin­g or effort that is truly radical," Teri said.

"I do know that one year of collecting attached to this interestin­g choice of word cannot truly rectify the imbalance in the art world and in museums," she added.

"I do think this year of collecting art by only women could possibly be the first step, but it is a tiny step."

Bedford agreed that this plan is just a start. "And I'm also hoping that our decision has a reverberat­ing effect across the museum field," he said.

"It's a consciousn­ess-raising act as well. It's supposed to precipitat­e an endless action in that direction," he added, promising also to publish the results of this femaleonly programme in a year.

But Teri insisted that "many gigantic steps" are needed to rectify the male-female imbalance in the art world.

She said that, for instance, museums need to invest in living artists that reside and work in the surroundin­g areas if they really want to reflect the richness and diversity of today's art.

She gave museums this advice: "Stop buying art that isn't good just because it's made by well-known white artists. Start taking risks and investing in black and brown living artists."

Donna Drew Sawyer, chief executive officer of the Baltimore Office of Promotion and The Arts, said she had several questions about the initiative, including the fact that it drew so much attention.

"Why did a male’s call to action seem to resonate so loudly in this instance when women are the subject and have been calling for the same action forever?" Donna wrote in the magazine BmoreArt.

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