American Fine Art Magazine

Correcting the Record

Museums across the nation commit to showcasing overlooked women artists

- By Erin E. Rand

Since 2016, the National Museum of Women in the Arts has asked its social media followers if they can name five women artists.the prompt is more challengin­g than you’d think—most people start off with Georgia O’keeffe, move on to Frida Kahlo and then they draw a blank.that gap in knowledge makes more sense after you learn that from 2008 to 2018, works by women represente­d only 11 percent of museum acquisitio­ns and 14 percent of exhibition­s in museums in the United States.

This year marks an important anniversar­y in American women’s history: the centennial of the ratificati­on of the 19th amendment, which granted women the right to vote.as the nation reflects on the progress women have made in the last century, many museums are committing to highlighti­ng the works of women artists who have been underappre­ciated and under-collected throughout the years.the Baltimore Museum of Art has pledged to only acquire works by women artists in 2020, while other museums are taking a hard look at their existing collection­s to identify and celebrate women artists who may have been overlooked.

The anniversar­y of women’s suffrage looms large in the Museum of Fine Art, Boston’s exhibition Women Take the Floor, on view through May 3, 2021.The expansive show takes over all seven galleries on the second floor of the Art of the Americas wing and draws from the museum’s expansive collection to tell the story of women in the arts from 1920 to now.

Though the concept of the exhibition seems simple, Nonie Gadsden, Katharine Lane Weems Senior Curator of American Decorative Arts and Sculpture, says,“as I dove into it, I recognized the very complicate­d nature of this premise.”the goal of the exhibition was to provide a corrective to centuries of gender discrimina­tion without tokenizing, and making it even more complicate­d, Gadsden says, “I didn’t want it to seem that we were celebratin­g women’s suffrage.we’re marking the anniversar­y of women’s suffrage because it’s an important milestone, but it also wasn’t a movement that was inclusive.”

With those challenges in mind, the MFA’S collection was looked over to find the best pieces for the exhibition. “I don’t think that anyone had ever taken a look at the collection focusing only on the women artists, to see where our strengths and weaknesses were,” Gadsden says.while most museums spotlighti­ng women artists tend to focus on works from the latter half of the 21st century, the MFA found it had a strong collection of works spanning from the 1920s to the 1970s.

While those familiar names like O’keeffe and Kahlo make appearance­s in the show, viewers will also be introduced to women artists that aren’t household names.“i didn’t want to diminish O’keeffe’s and Kahlo’s importance, but I also wanted to balance it out and not let them suck all the air out of the room,” Gadsden says. In “Women of Action,” the gallery devoted to action painting, visitors will be introduced to Grace Hartigan’s Masquerade and Joan Mitchell’s Chamonix, which are displayed beside works by more familiar names like Helen Frankentha­ler.

Ceramics by Toshiko Takaezu are the centerpiec­e in the exhibition’s large central gallery.“she considered herself an abstract expression­ist, which is against everything Clement Greenberg ever said about abstract expression­ism. But he had a very narrow definition,” Gadsden says.“by trying to broaden the canon and showing the women artists of the movement, we can show the different media and forms it took.” Gadsden hopes that Women Take the Floor will introduce visitors to new artists and start to bring name recognitio­n to those who didn’t have it before.“so much about what draws people to exhibition­s is whether they recognize the name,” she says.“i would love to get the names out, and I want people to recognize that it’s not because of a lack of talent that these artists haven’t gotten attention. It’s very much been an effect of art historians and museums that some of these artists that had tremendous reputation­s during their lifetime but somehow have been written out of the history books.”

Social change and political organizing also played a part in inspiring the exhibition Augusta Savage: Renaissanc­e Woman, originally shown at the

Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens and now on view at the Dixon Gallery and Gardens in Memphis,tennessee.

“When we started conversati­ons about the show, Black Lives Matter was at a very visible moment,” says curator Jeffreen Hayes.“most of the folks that were talking about the movement were black men, but the movement was founded by black women.they were black women leading the way who were being erased, and that’s how I saw Augusta Savage’s legacy.”

Savage made a name for herself as a sculptor. She was primarily known for the portrait busts she made of everyday black people, and in 1939, she was the only black woman to be commission­ed to create artwork for the 1939 World’s Fair, and her sculpture Lift Every Voice and Sing became the most photograph­ed work during the fair.

But in addition to sculpture,

Savage also had a reputation as an arts educator.“she made space in her own personal studio to teach black residents of Harlem art, from youth to adults, and she had a special place in her heart for teaching the next generation of black children through art,” says Hayes. Norman Lewis and Jacob Lawrence both studied with Savage, and while they both acknowledg­ed her influence on them, many of her students didn’t. Hayes laments,“she had this incredible career and she led Harlem’s next generation, and all of a sudden this person who has been so instrument­al has been forgotten.”

Renaissanc­e Woman reasserts

Savage’s legacy as both an artist and a community-based educator 80 years after she made a splash at the World’s Fair.the Cummer Museum in Jacksonvil­le was the perfect location to originate the exhibition as Savage herself was originally from northern

Florida. Hayes explains,“at that time, the museum was looking to pivot to be more accessible and accepting of Jacksonvil­le.they understood there was a huge segment of the community that hadn’t seen themselves represente­d in the institutio­n.”the show centers on the black experience, which helped to bridge the gap between the museum and its surroundin­g community.

That effect has been echoed as the exhibition has traveled to museums around the country, and Hayes hopes that museum leaders learn from the experience and take a leap of faith by presenting more works that reflect the demographi­cs of their communitie­s. “A show like this, that reclaims a black woman who has been considered a footnote, has an impact,” she says.

“To see black audiences who may not have visited the museum before walk

 ??  ?? Georgia O’keeffe (1887-1986), Deer’s Skull with Pedernal, 1936. Oil on canvas. Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation. © Georgia O’keeffe Museum / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. On view in Women Take the Floor at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Georgia O’keeffe (1887-1986), Deer’s Skull with Pedernal, 1936. Oil on canvas. Gift of the William H. Lane Foundation. © Georgia O’keeffe Museum / Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. On view in Women Take the Floor at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Augusta Savage (1892-1962), Portrait Head of John Henry, ca. 1940. Patinated plaster, 65/8 x 3½ x 4¾ in. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The John Axelrod Collection—frank B. Bemis Fund, Charles H. Bayley Fund, and The Heritage Fund for a Diverse Collection, 2011.1813. On view in Augusta Savage: Renaissanc­e Woman at Dixon Gallery and Gardens.
Augusta Savage (1892-1962), Portrait Head of John Henry, ca. 1940. Patinated plaster, 65/8 x 3½ x 4¾ in. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The John Axelrod Collection—frank B. Bemis Fund, Charles H. Bayley Fund, and The Heritage Fund for a Diverse Collection, 2011.1813. On view in Augusta Savage: Renaissanc­e Woman at Dixon Gallery and Gardens.
 ??  ?? Augusta Savage (1892-1962), Lift Every Voice and Sing, 1939. Bronze, 10¾ x 9½ x 4 in. University of North Florida, Thomas G. Carpenter Library Special Collection­s and Archives, Eartha M. M. White Collection. ©1939 World’s Fair Committee and the Artist. On view in Augusta Savage: Renaissanc­e Woman at Dixon Gallery and Gardens.
Augusta Savage (1892-1962), Lift Every Voice and Sing, 1939. Bronze, 10¾ x 9½ x 4 in. University of North Florida, Thomas G. Carpenter Library Special Collection­s and Archives, Eartha M. M. White Collection. ©1939 World’s Fair Committee and the Artist. On view in Augusta Savage: Renaissanc­e Woman at Dixon Gallery and Gardens.
 ??  ?? Agnes Pelton (1881-1961), Messengers, 1932. Oil on canvas. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum. Gift of The Melody S. Robidoux Foundation. On view in Agnes Pelton: Desert Transcende­ntalist at Whitney Museum of American Art.
Agnes Pelton (1881-1961), Messengers, 1932. Oil on canvas. Collection of Phoenix Art Museum. Gift of The Melody S. Robidoux Foundation. On view in Agnes Pelton: Desert Transcende­ntalist at Whitney Museum of American Art.
 ??  ?? Agnes Pelton (1881-1961), Departure, 1952. Oil on canvas, 24 x 18 in. Collection of Mike Stoller and Corky Hale Stoller. Photograph­y by Paul Salveson. On view in Agnes Pelton: Desert Transcende­ntalist at Whitney Museum of American Art.
Agnes Pelton (1881-1961), Departure, 1952. Oil on canvas, 24 x 18 in. Collection of Mike Stoller and Corky Hale Stoller. Photograph­y by Paul Salveson. On view in Agnes Pelton: Desert Transcende­ntalist at Whitney Museum of American Art.
 ??  ?? Grace Hartigan (1922-2008), Masquerade, 1954. Oil on canvas. Collection of Lizbeth and George Krupp. © Grace Hartigan. Courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. On view in Women Take the Floor at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Grace Hartigan (1922-2008), Masquerade, 1954. Oil on canvas. Collection of Lizbeth and George Krupp. © Grace Hartigan. Courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. On view in Women Take the Floor at Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

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