Women in the Arts #5

The following blog post is the fifth in a series of Facebook posts I wrote for Women's History Month, and to follow along with the hashtag #5WomenArtists, started by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. These posts were written to be an accessible, informative, and humorous way to encourage friends of mine to engage with art history and feminism.


ALRIGHT FAM LISTEN UP. We're talking about ‪#‎FiveWomenArtists‬ in celebration of Women's History Month leading up to International Women's Day TOMORROW. This is our FIFTH artist in our series (you'll get a bonus post tomorrow shh), and she's my FAVE.

SOPHIE CALLE, Y'ALL.

It is 1979 and we are in Venice, following a man we'll only refer to as Henri B., whom we met at a party in Paris just a few days prior. Our pal Sophie Calle has shrugged on a trench coat, donned a blond wig and armed herself with a 35mm camera for the task, and she is basically quietly stalking this man all across Venice to see just how far she can take it -- but in a nice way? "I was just trying to play," she later said of the work, "Suite Venitienne."

Our second artist named Sophie in this series, Calle is a French-born performance artist and she is so rad. Her work is conceptual in theme and execution, exploring ideas like intimacy, sexuality, and the private/public space through avenues which might be considered nontraditional (no paintings, prints, or sculptures in sight). Example -- after her own foray into the Private Eye biz (see above), Calle hired her own private investigator (under a pseudonym) to investigate... herself??? This work, "The Shadow," (1981), was Calle's attempt to get "photographic evidence of [her] own existence." Nice. Or in "L'Hotel," (1981) when Calle worked a three-month stint as a maid at a Big Hotel in Paris. She would open up the luggage in the rooms she was sent to clean, photograph their contents, and then try to piece together biographies for the individuals to whom they belonged (see an extract from this series attached). What the heck! Travel safe, folks.

Sophie "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" Calle carries this particular brand of playful voyeurism throughout her body of work, whether she is getting strangers to tell her the worst breakup story they have to help ease the pain of her own painful breakup ("Douleur Exquise," 2003), or replacing paintings in MoMA with descriptions of the paintings, as written by the guards assigned to their rooms ("Ghosts," 1991). Her work is cleverly thought out, and meticulously put together. Sophie Calle is a woman after my own heart. She still practices today, and is the only artist I can think of whose work simultaneously moves me to tears AND makes me go, "What the HECK, Sophie." If you check out no other artist on my list, make it this one.

Check out these posts from the beginning, with a rundown on gender inequality in the arts and our first Sophie on my profile.

Tune in tomorrow for a big old blowout of a recap, celebration, and meditation on badass ladies in art! Happy Women's History Month!

xoxo

Women in the Arts #4

The following blog post is the fourth in a series of Facebook posts I wrote for Women's History Month, and to follow along with the hashtag #5WomenArtists, started by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. These posts were written to be an accessible, informative, and humorous way to encourage friends of mine to engage with art history and feminism.


FAST FACTS: We're talking about ‪#‎5WomenArtists‬ in celebration of Women's History Month! We've learned about three fantastic women so far, and now we get to chat about ADRIAN PIPER!!!

It is 1981, and we're at a little school in Cambridge, Mass. Maybe it is snowing. I don't know. Adrian Piper is getting her PhD from Harvard, and -- you guys. It's just. Adrian Piper is one accomplished gal, and it will take a lot of time to list every single badass thing she has done. We could talk about her MANY degrees (School of Visual Arts, A.A. Visual Arts; CUNY, B.A. in Philosophy; Harvard, M.A. and PhD, Philosophy -- not to mention her time studying Kant in Berlin for three years). We could talk about her fellowships (National Endowment -- twice -- AND Guggenheim? Damn, Piper BACK at it again with the fellowships). We could talk about her faculty positions at Harvard, Georgetown, Stanford, and Wellesley (among others) or how when she was put on the "Suspicious Travelers," list whilst working in Berlin, Piper said, "Fuck that," and just never returned to America. As if you could just DO that.

It should be pretty clear that Adrian Piper is a "Don't take 'No,' for an answer," kind of person, and has worked incredibly hard to be where she is today (Berlin. Remember, from before?). Her art practice is conceptual, and her body of work ranges from traditional painting, to prints, drawings, sculpture, photomanipulation and documentation, as well as performance art (among others. I KNOW.) Her work is reflective of both her intellectual pursuits (Kantian metaethics) and whip-smart personality. She is unafraid to confront issues such as race, gender, class, and "otherness," and Peggy Phalen has said that her work shows "the ways in which racism and sexism are intertwined pathologies which have distorted our lives." Piper herself calls this kind of confrontation "therapeutic and catalytic." Rock on, Adrian.

Some of Piper's more well-known works include "Mythic Being," (1972) where she donned an afro wig, a mustache, and a distinctly male-gait, with which she sauntered around New York City, negotiating a male/female space, exploring blackness and the black male figure in among the crowds. She also produced a series of Calling Cards -- one of which I've uploaded here as the thumbnail to this post ("My Calling (Card) #1" (1986-1990)) -- to ostensibly pass out to friends or strangers, and call them out for their problematic behavior in a clinical and premeditated way. Piper continues to practice today, and she took home the Golden Lion Award for Best Artist at the 56th Venice Biennale last year. Her work continues to be shows at museums internationally. Nice, you guys. Nice.

Check out her meticulously put together website here:http://www.adrianpiper.com/

In addition to Adrian Piper, we've talked about gender inequality in the arts, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Zubeida Agha and Yayoi Kusama. You can check out those posts on my page, or give 'em a Google!

Women in the Arts #3

The following blog post is the third in a series of Facebook posts I wrote for Women's History Month, and to follow along with the hashtag #5WomenArtists, started by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. These posts were written to be an accessible, informative, and humorous way to encourage friends of mine to engage with art history and feminism.


HI GUYS WE'RE ON A ROLL! We're talking about ‪#‎5WomenArtists‬ in celebration of Women's History Month, leading up to International Women's Day on the 8th! Hey wow neat. Check out my first post about gender inequality in the arts and Sophie Taeuber-Arp and the following one on Zubeida Agha. They're on my page. Go read them.

Yesterday we were in Pakistan in 1947, and today we are in NEW YORK and it is 1958! You are hanging with Yayoi Kusama, 27, who has just moved from Japan to make it big in America. Already an established artist in Japan, Kusama grew tired of the same old same old kimono and cherry blossoms watercolour scene that she felt Japan had to offer, and quickly struck up friendships with Georgia O'Keefe, Donald Judd, and Eva Hesse in their hip af studio which THEY ALL SHARED. Dang.

Ever since Kusama was a child, she was plagued with some pretty intense hallucinations. To her, these hallucinations were reminiscent of a never ending series of polka dots, and these polka dots (which she called "infinity nets") quickly became a signature of her very large body of conceptual art. If you've ever seen a room totally fucking wrekt with polka dot stickers & somebody called it art, you can bet that our homegirl Kusama was behind it. Not to be confined to simply one style or signature, however, Kusama also continued to pursue painting, as well as sculpture, and performance art.

In 1967, Kusama performed a fairly notorious piece of performance art at the 33rd Venice Biennale, where she, dressed in a golden kimono, attempted to sell off her sculpture, piece by piece, to passers-by. The biennale organisers were Not Having It, and quickly shut her down. Et tu, The Man?

In 1973, Kusama packed up shop and headed back for Japan. She felt that her mental health had taken a turn for the worse, and so voluntarily checked herself into the Seiwa Hospital for the Mentally Ill, where she still lives today. She is still practicing art at the age of 87, and has been recognised internationally as a defining artist of her generation. She has teamed up with major fashion designers of all sorts, and major retrospectives of her work have been shown at the Tate, The MoMA, and the Whitney. In 2008, Christie's sold one of her works for $5.1 million, the then-record for any female artist (oh, and for comparison, the highest selling piece of art of all time is a Picasso at $179 million. that gender gap, huh?). Make her a household name.

The piece I've uploaded with this post as its thumbnail is "I pray with all of my love for tulips." (2012). Also, below, check out Kusama's DRESS SENSE, y'all.

Check out some more of her work here: http://www.victoria-miro.com/artists/31-yayoi-kusama/