Please note: Information about this exhibition is limited.
A shared yearning for free expression has animated an enduring solidarity between women poets and artists. Using words and images, brimming with passion and determination, they communicate with and inspire one another across geographic boundaries and historic eras.
Such devotion is evident in Muriel Rukeyser’s honor poem for the German artist Käthe Kollwitz and in Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party homage to Emily Dickinson. The critic Lucy Lippard has argued that “making poetry out of politics, making art from lives lived outside of power, and making politics out of that art and poetry—these are the three solid dimensions, the third power of the women’s liberation movement.”
This collection of printed poems, artists’ books, and art objects celebrates these creative and social bonds.
The Artist,
Käthe Kollwitz
German-born Käthe Kollwitz used her prints and sculptures to confront social injustice and suffering.
The Artist,
Judy Chicago
After more than four decades, Judy Chicago continues to be an influential feminist artist, author, and educator. Her work helped establish the Feminist Art Movement of the 1970s.