The Guardian - Journal

Let’s tell the story of art without men

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If the art world is so “vast and varied”, as the subheading on your article says (Art unlocked, 13 April), why were 10 male artists and only three women artists featured?

Why, yet again, are we being asked to consider masterwork­s, “old and new”, which reflect a not-sovaried, male-dominated canon?

It’s 2024, Katy Hessel has written The Story of Art Without Men (to prove female artists have always existed – not just in contempora­ry times) and in the UK, the Women in Revolt! exhibition has just finished at Tate Britain; Yoko

Ono’s retrospect­ive is on show at Tate Modern; Monica Sjöö was recently celebrated at Modern

Art Oxford, and Shirley Craven’s textile exhibition has opened at Manchester’s Whitworth gallery. So there is some hope that we are, in the words of Phoebe

Hoban, “finally infiltrati­ng”.

As a university art educator, I always use a wide range of classic and contempora­ry artists who reflect back the diverse world in which we live to ensure the traineetea­cher students go on to equally reflect back the same in their own classrooms. They leave university ready to challenge and disrupt a curriculum historical­ly dominated by the white, dead, male, Eurocentri­c artist. Please, for the sake of artists everywhere, young and old, help to disrupt a maledefaul­t setting, and reconsider the artists you include next time.

Dr Suzy Tutchell

Associate professor in art education, University of Reading

• Reading your article on tears in art (Top of the sobs, 17 April), I took up Francesco Vezzoli’s challenge. In one minute of Googling I found Rogier van der Weyden’s Descent from the Cross, where several of the figures have tears on their faces. And there are so many more. Caroline Higgitt

Edinburgh

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