Art News June 2015 Studies Progress Or Not For Women Artists
/The June 2015 issue of ART News is dedicated to studying Women in the Art World. The dense discussion of topics relevant to the lives of women artists worldwide includes a reprint of Linda Nochlin’s famous 1971 essay ‘Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?’
Guest contributing editor Maura Reilly, the founding curator of the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum takes a look at the hard statistics in Taking the Measure of Sexism: Facts, Figures and Fixes.
There is no doubt that progress has been made. The New York Times wrote in 2006 that females now comprised 60 percent of students pursuing a ‘high art’ education. Reilly, like Nochlin almost 50 years ago, writes:
The more closely one examines art-world statistics, the more glaringly obvious it becomes that, despite decades of postcolonial, feminist, anti-racist, and queer activism and theorizing, the majority continues to be defined as white, Euro-American, heterosexual, privileged, and, above all, male. Sexism is still so insidiously woven into the institutional fabric, language, and logic of the mainstream art world that it often goes undetected.
In September 2014, ARTNET News asked 20 powerful women in the art world if gender biased and they responded with a thunderous ‘yes’.
Reilly continues with a study of major stats by gender in museums and galleries around the world.
Women artists contributing their perspective to this issue of ART News include Eleanor Antin, Lynda Benglis, Coco Fusco, Chitra Ganesh, Cleopatra’s, K8 Hardy, Deborah Kass, Carolee Schneeman, Cindy Sherman, Shzhzia Sikander, Mikalene Thomas, Betty Tompkins, Jamian Juliano-Villani, Wangechi Mutu, Martha Wilson, Guerilla Girls, and Carrie Mae Weems.
Nairobi born, Brooklyn artist Wangechi-Mutu — a personal favorite of mine — contributes a perspective that goes beyond numbers.
I think there are other ways as well to note the disparities—nuanced ways in which the absence of women is manifest—in terms of ideas, choice of imagery, type of work curated in exhibitions, and how the female form is presented. How often do women appear in art, and how do they sit and perform in the works? Is the figure always represented as docile, inactive, sexualized, or subordinate? Does she have an inferior role in a larger narrative that emphasizes the superiority of the male protagonist? Is her appearance stereotypical in terms of weight, skin color, hair texture, and facial expression? Statistics help document the unfair representation of women, but studies and analysis of conceptual and intellectual misrepresentation are also important.
Related on AOC: Brooklyn Artist Wangechi Mutu Confronts Women as Active Protagonists