Impress your friends with five fast facts about NMWA collection artists who celebrate the power, beauty, and complexity of the female body.

1. Niki de Saint Phalle
French American artist Niki de Saint Phalle (1930–2002) was inspired by her pregnant friend Clarice Rivers to create her “Nanas,” curvy, joyful figures that honor women’s bodies. Pregnant Nana (1993) embodies an exuberant feminist spirit, highlighted in voluptuous curves, a dance-like position, and lively colors. It is also reminiscent of fertility goddess sculptures made by ancient cultures.

2. Alison Saar
Alison Saar (b. 1956) describes the female body as an “incredible machine” that can endure much to sustain itself and others. The cast iron skillets in Scorch Song (2022) allude to the subject’s role as a nurturer and provider. Yet the figure stands unsmiling and tall, a testament to the burdens and strength she holds.

3. Rania Matar
Rania Matar (b. 1964) was born and raised in Lebanon, later moving to the U.S. in 1984. Her multicultural experience led her to a photography career in which she explores individual and collective identity. In her “SHE” series, Matar captures these narratives by photographing young women in both the U.S. and the Middle East in dramatic environments outside the familiarity of their homes.

4. Lalla Essaydi
Moroccan artist Lalla Essaydi (b. 1956) challenges the representation of women in 19th Century Orientalist paintings, in which women from the East were exoticized for European viewers. Bullets Revisited #3 (2012) recalls a seductive female nude, but Essaydi’s subject is dressed, her clothing adorned in polished bullet casings, and she looks directly at the viewer. Here Essaydi also comments on the physical violence women experienced during the Arab Spring.

5. Deborah Paauwe
Deborah Paauwe (b. 1972) describes her works as “purely autobiographical,” exploring the tensions between childhood and womanhood. Night Swimming (2002) illustrates this blurred transition; the gauzy, hot pink tulle evokes a sense of child-like play and offers some protection from sight, yet the tangle of legs underneath insinuates a sexual coming-of-age.