In partnership with the Association of Women in the Arts, Artnet presents a series of stories amplifying the voices of women shaping the fine-arts sector. Through candid conversations, industry ...
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Women Artists Breaking Barriers in the Art World
In the art world, male artists seem to dominate the topic of conversation, but that hasn’t stopped women artists from carving out their own lane. Contemporary female artists such as Yayoi Kusama, ...
This online supplement for There is a Woman in Every Color: Black Women in Art is intended as a companion to the exhibition in the galleries at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art. Developed by the ...
In 2024 Southern Illinois University, along with the Sharp Museum, hosted an exhibit called Women’s Voices. These are stories from some of the featured artists. Documentaries is available to stream on ...
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Oliver Art Center exhibition honors women artists
“She: Honoring Women in Art,” an exhibition exploring what it means to be a woman and an artist in today’s world, will open at the Oliver Art Center on Feb. 21. The exhibit focuses on aspects of ...
The sprawling exhibition “Women Artists: Four Centuries of Creativity” also issues a call for continued dialogue about their legacy in art history. The new art exhibition “Women Artists”, which spans ...
In front of a lively crowd on Saturday, Dayton Art Institute leaders formally unveiled a new gallery dedicated to feminist art.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Sunday at the Cleveland Museum of Art was bustling with several art tours, but one intentionally celebrated some of arts unsung heroes: Women. A small group gathered with a docent ...
“It’s just like planning a dinner,” the renowned computer scientist Grace Hopper once quipped about computing in a 1967 issue of Cosmopolitan. “You have to plan ahead and schedule everything so it’s ...
The museum industry has some serious work to do, in terms of equal representation. Museum collections typically include far more works by white men than works by other artists, according to Rachel ...
LONDON — Now You See Us, the title of an exhibition currently at Tate Britain, alludes to one half of the phrase “now you see it; now you don’t,” typically signaling some sleight of hand or trickery.
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