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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Women's art through the centuries

51 replies

PotholeHellhole · 13/04/2021 17:02

I thought it would be nice if we took a moment to mention our favoured female artists.

I'm not particularly cultured, so I'm only familiar with the most famous names. I hope to learn of more neglected artists after the Womanittee has got going!

This is a poem by Christina Rossetti.

A Study (A Soul)

She stands as pale as Parian statues stand;
Like Cleopatra when she turned at bay,
And felt her strength above the Roman sway,
And felt the aspic writhing in her hand.
Her face is steadfast toward the shadowy land,
For dim beyond it looms the light of day;
Her feet are steadfast; all the arduous way
That foot-track hath not wavered on the sand.
She stands there like a beacon thro' the night,
A pale clear beacon where the storm-drift is;
She stands alone, a wonder deathly white;
She stands there patient, nerved with inner might,
Indomitable in her feebleness,
Her face and will athirst against the light.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
17
KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:43

Natalia Goncharova

Women's art through the centuries
KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:45

Helen Mabel Trevor

Women's art through the centuries
KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:45

Mary Cassatt

Women's art through the centuries
KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:48

1659 painting by Elisabetta Sirani depicting Timocleia of Thebes pushing the Thracian captain who raped her into a well

Women's art through the centuries
Lettera · 14/04/2021 07:49

Was just about to post a link to that account Kizzy! It's fantastic!

KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:49

Tove Jansson

Women's art through the centuries
KizzyWayfarer · 14/04/2021 07:52

Lettera it is, isn’t it, and I love all the different arts like Japanese paper cutting and South American weaving that I would never come across.

Wrongsideofhistorymyarse · 14/04/2021 08:30

Annie Swynerton. I saw an exhibition in Manchester and her works were luminous.

manchesterartgallery.org/exhibitions-and-events/exhibition/annie-swynnerton-painting-light-and-hope/

334bu · 14/04/2021 08:40

Barbara Hepworth

Women's art through the centuries
Babdoc · 14/04/2021 08:52

SulisMinerva, I agree about Artemisia Gentileschi. Did you know she was a rape victim who actually had the courage to take her attacker to court, all those centuries ago?
I’m sure it influenced her art. Her painting of Judith slaying Holofernes must have been cathartic.

MaMaLa321 · 14/04/2021 09:33

Gwen Raverat. A talented woodcutter and also the author of the delightful 'A Cambridge Childhood'. She was part of the Darwin family, and records life with them, and then was a semi detached part of the Bloomsbury group.

MaMaLa321 · 14/04/2021 09:39

what I hadn't heard of recently was the Pinwill sisters. They came from the middle class and were trained by their father in woodcarving in order to help restore churches in the South West. As in - I believe that he arranged for them to be trained. This was in the Victorian period and their work was well respected.
I can't say that I'm into Victorian religious carving, but I did find it a remarkable story.

SulisMinerva · 14/04/2021 09:59

I did know that babdoc and it does seem to have influenced her art. Amazingly brave for that time.

TabooNCoke · 14/04/2021 10:09

Yesika Salgado is worth a google. I heard her on the Latino USA podcast talking about her poetry on fruit and love www.yesikasalgado.com/

CrossPurposes · 14/04/2021 11:01

I highly recommend a visit to the Kathe Kollwitz museum in Cologne. It was an intense experience though some of her work is lighter.

JoyousAsOtters · 14/04/2021 11:38

Angelica Kauffmann was one of only two women admitted at the founding of the Royal Academy in London - she's really interesting and definitely worth a look, as a very successful female artist in the 18th century.

Women's art through the centuries
YouNoob · 14/04/2021 12:40

Wonderful art 😊

I am into studio glass art, especially fused glass. I love Nao Saito's work. She's Japanese and her work is beautiful. There are a few female Japanese artists who produce beautiful studio glass.

Women's art through the centuries
Women's art through the centuries
Women's art through the centuries
AbstractExpressionist · 14/04/2021 13:14

What a lovely idea for a thread OP.

Some of my contemporary faves:
Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011) American post war artist.

Faith Ringgold, b1930, New York. Painter, civil rights activist, Feminist, writer and known for her narrative quilts.

Kilki Smith, b1954, Nuremberg. American German artist. Figurative work confronting feminism, life & death, gender.

Sally Mann, b1951, USA. Photographer depicting intimate images of her family.

YetAnotherSpartacus · 14/04/2021 14:13

I read a book about The Dinner Party, an installation by Judy Chicago, now permanently at the Brooklyn Museum, when I was in my twenties. I've never forgotten it

I saw it (in the 80s). It was amazing. I still remember it so vividly.

Mermoose · 14/04/2021 14:45

Francine Van Hove.

Women's art through the centuries
Women's art through the centuries
Lettera · 15/04/2021 10:41

Do check out Art Across:

www.artacross.co.uk/about/about-art-across

It's run by a wonderful woman called Sara Riccardi who is a freelance art historian. Her aim is to make art history accessible. She's been doing online talks over the past year but in normal times runs courses etc (for example 'Seventeen Artists Who Just Happen To Be Women')! Worth signing up for emails as her events are excellent.

OhDear2200 · 15/04/2021 11:44

I came of Twitter because but I really miss that on Twitter @KizzyWayfarer

It’s fabulous

OhDear2200 · 15/04/2021 11:45

Love this thread!