Tag: Judy Chicago

  • Reading. Through The Flower.

    Reading. Through The Flower.

    It’s been a bit since I’ve shared what I’m reading with you!  I just finished Judy Chicago’s Through The Flower and wanted to share some quick thoughts I took from her early experiences as a female artist.

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    If you see a need, fill it.

    Womanhouse

    image found here

    Frustrated with the patriarchal structure of the art world, in 1970 Chicago took a faculty position with Fresno State College to teach a women-only art program.  The groundbreaking Feminist Art Program provided female artists a platform for creating artwork specific to their experiences as women.  

    Know the past to find the future.

    Judy-Chicago-The-Dinner-Party

    the dinner party, 1974-1979

    image found here 

    For several years, Chicago immersed herself in the study of other female artists working in abstraction.  There is truly nothing new under the sun, but looking back at how other women created and functioned in the male dominated world (both the art world and the world at large) helped give the artist the confidence and commitment to create her own visual language and tradition.

    Be true to you.

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    queen victoria, 1972

    image found here 

    In her early years, Chicago heard a professor tell her class that women had made no contributions to art history.  This, along with a sense of equality and justice instilled by her father, propelled her to work tirelessly not only to become an important artist but to become an important, inherently feminine artist.  Chicago’s style of feminism is very direct, while the work of other female artists can be more subtle.  

    As an artist, I find myself feeling like I should be making important statements with my work.  But as a person, I’ve never been one for overt statements, though I have definite opinions.  Over time, Chicago found her voice.  I hope to do the same.

    Top image by me.  Other image sources linked above.

     

  • Artsy Spot: Palm Springs Art Museum

    Artsy Spot: Palm Springs Art Museum

    While Mr. Forager and I had originally made plans to trek to Big Bear over the weekend, a thick blanket of snow and us sans the CA law required snow chains, along with a sick-with-a-cold Mr. Forager led to a change in plans.  So following our Saturday ritual of breakfast in Joshua Tree ( at Crossroads Cafe— their “piggy pancakes” are my favorite indulgent breakfast ) and stocking up on victuals at the little JT Farmers’ Market, we drove through the wind farms to Palm Springs.

    We wandered around the shops and a few galleries in downtown PS ( note: Stark + Kent Gallery— best contemporary selection in PS, including a few artists featured here on Artsy Forager! ).  After doing the requisite touristy photo-op under Anish Kapoor’s Marilyn statue, currently installed in downtown Palm Springs, we decided to make our way over to the Palm Springs Art Museum. Now I normally have pretty low expectations for small town art museums, knowing they don’t usually have the financial support of big city institutions, so we were pleasantly surprised by what we found there.

    Jim Isermann installation
    Jim Isermann installation

    Palm Springs being a hot bed of modern architecture and design, it was no surprise that one of the current special exhibitions featured the design-art hybrid work of Fernando and Humberto Campana in the exhibition, Antibodies.  Their functional yet incredibly artistic designs take inspired living to an entirely different level.

    Antibodies_Fernando and Humberto Campana_photo by David A. Lee
    Antibodies, Fernando and Humberto Campana ( photo by David A. Lee )

    source

    But it was the museum’s contemporary collection that delighted us most.  As we walked up the stairs past the giant yellow Isermann installation ( see above pic ), so the magic began.  Marina Abramovic’s The Kitchen V, Carrying the Milk, held us spellbound, as we watched the artist as she stood, she the very subject of the Vermeer-esque vignette, holding a bowl of milk, at times struggling to hold her pose.

    The Kitchen V, Carrying the Milk by Marina Abramovic
    The Kitchen V, Carrying the Milk by Marina Abramovic

    source

    Moving away from the Abramovic video installation, our eyes were caught by what from a side angle looked to be an interesting light sculpture installation, but then I stood in front of it and that’s when something bewitching and delightful happened.. see the video!

    Exploded View ( Birds ) by Jim Campbell
    Exploded View ( Birds ) by Jim Campbell

    Here are a few more of our favorite highlights from the contemporary collection–

    Casualty in the Art Realm by Robert Arneson
    Casualty in the Art Realm by Robert Arneson
    Exploded Crystal Chandelier Headache by Ed Ruscha
    Exploded Crystal Chandelier Headache by Ed Ruscha
    Rainbow Picket by Judy Chicago
    Rainbow Picket by Judy Chicago
    Corona 2003 by Anish Kapoor
    Mr. Forager, contemplating Corona 2003 by Anish Kapoor

    Corona 2003 by Anish Kapoor ( above ) with its beautifully disorienting reflective surface and its acoustic properties ( when standing in front of it, as Mr. F is above, someone a few yards behind can hear what is being said into it ), we found it much more interesting than his giant Marilyn Monroe sculpture getting so much attention outside.  I’m glad we took the time to escape the masses huddled around her upended skirt to experience something much more satisfying.

    Unless otherwise identified, all images are by Artsy Forager.  Other image sources are linked above.