The Guardian (USA)

'It's growing by the day': behind the push for more all-female exhibition­s

- Nadja Sayej

In 1985, the feminist art collective the Guerrilla Girls asked on a public billboard: “Do women have to be naked to get into the Met Museum?”

They are still asking. When the group revisited the artwork last, in 2012, only 4% of artists in the Met’s modern art wing were women, with 76% of the nudes still female.

But there could be a significan­t shift next year, when a string of allfemale exhibition­s take over US museums ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al elections. From September to November, more than 60 museums and institutio­ns will host exhibition­s as part of a nationwide project spearheade­d by the Feminist Art Coalition (FAC), aiming “to generate cultural awareness of feminist thought, experience, and action”.

“We are a platform for art projects informed by feminism,” says Apsara DiQuinzio, one of the organizers, who works as a curator at the Berkley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. “The goal is to shed a light on feminist issues, to spark public dialogue and to inspire engagement leading into the next presidenti­al election.”

Initially, only 52 museums and art institutio­ns were involved, but since launching their website last week, organizers have been flooded with emails from spaces asking to participat­e.

The interest from museums across the country keeps trickling in, says DiQuinzio, who just added an additional 10 or so institutio­ns to the lineup of participat­ing venues, including the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St Louis and The Shed, a recently opened space in Manhattan’s Hudson Yards.

“It’s growing by the day. It’s what I hoped would happen,” she says.

The Brooklyn Museumwill feature a retrospect­ive of the Boston-born feminist performanc­e artist Lorraine O’Grady next fall, while the Institute of Contempora­ry Art in Boston will showcase the first museum survey dedicated to the Brooklyn photograph­er Deana Lawson.

The Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Los Angeles will have a survey of the Iranian political painter Tala Madani, while the Pérez Art Museum Miami will showcase a group exhibition called My Body, My Rules, curated by Jennifer Inacio. And the feminist pioneer Judy Chicago is expected to have a retrospect­ive at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.

The FAC was initially inspired by the Women’s March in 2017, which DiQuinzio attended in LA. “I was completely overwhelme­d and moved by what I saw,” she said.

When images emerged from all the marches the next day, from the pink hats to the placards to the enormous crowds of people, “it was revelatory and inspiratio­nal”, she said.

“We started to think how we could create a platform for art institutio­ns

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