Category Archives: Feminism

  1. Nalini Malani at the National Gallery London “My Reality is Different”

          Nalini Malani’s immersive animated installation at the National Gallery London plunges us into a world of bizarre figures, creatures, and energy waves that swirl and constantly change shape as they invade the complacency of the people in famous European paintings, bit by bit . Nalini Malini (That’s a clip from the installation. […]

  2. Humaira Abid: Confronting Women’s Oppressions

    Women’s rights are front and center as Iran erupts in anger at its oppressive extremely conservative government after Mahsa Amini a young woman  died from being  beaten by the so-called morality police. Two 16 year old girls Sarina Esmailzadeh and Nika Shakrami,  have also died in the protests. In this country, the repeal of Roe […]

  3. Embodied Change: South Asian Art Across Time at the Asian Art Museum

      Natalia Di Pietranto, the new Assistant Curator of South Asian Art at the Seattle Art Museum  explains her first exhibition “Embodied Change, Asian Art Across Time” as follows “I wanted to . . . explore how the body is a site of both personal intimacy and possibility for change. . . I hope that […]

  4. Women’s Suffrage and Women’s Suffering

    The Center on Contemporary Art (COCA) WHAT STORY WOULD THE UNINTENDED BENEFICIARIES TELL (WSWUBT), which closes in two days, is a wonderful small selection of artists addressing the suffrage amendment and who was left out. The artists include Carletta Carrington Wilson with a selection from her incredible Letter to a Laundress series that I have […]

  5. Anniversary of Russian Revolution Part III: Pussy Riot

    Pussy Riot protest conditions of oppression in Russia and elsewhere.

  6. Maria De Los Angeles: Artist, Activist, Undocumented

    DACA Delayed Action for Childhood Arrivals a program that provides temporary status to young people brought here as children may be cancelled any day. Maria De Los Angeles, a DACA who is not afraid to speak out, addresses the tensions and anxieties of immigrant families in her drawings and performances.

  7. Mona Hatoum at the Tate Modern

    Mona Hatoum overtly expresses violence in her early performance works, then through metaphor with minimal materials she brings that sense of threat into our own bodies and lives.

  8. “¡Presente!: The Young Lords in New York”

    El Presente at El Museo del Barrio features the Young Lords of 1969-71, their activism and their art, a wonderful piece of history.

  9. Rameschwar Broota and Nalini Malani at the Kiran Nadar Museum in Delhi

    We can see the state of the earth and our spiritual crisis in the work of Rameschwar Broota and Nalini Malani at the Kirin Nadar Museum

  10. Feminism and Performance: Joan Jonas and Gina Pane

    Parellel Practices: Joan Jonas and Gina Pane at the Henry Art Gallery. The two artists have different roots, philosophies and trajectories.

  11. “Idle No More” and other Protests

    Protests of Keystone XL, coal trains, fracking, and the biggest oil presence in our lives explained at the Burke Museum in “Plastics Unwrapped”

  12. Lynn Hershmann Leeson !Women Art Revolution The Movie

    Lynn Hershmann Leeson Women Art Revolution tells the canonical history of US feminist art. Where are the other histories of feminist art?

  13. Women Artists in Seattle Part II

    Women Photographers with roots in South Asia and Afghanistan show challenging work about cultural contradictions and Tanis S’eiltin, Tlinglit installation artist challenges fixed ideas on Indigenous culture.