The Women's Art Movement (WAM) was an Australian feminist art movement, founded in Sydney in 1974, Melbourne in 1974, and Adelaide in 1976 (as the Women's Art Group, or WAG).
Such movements had already been created in other countries, in which women artists looked at their position as women in society and their position as artists through a feminist framework. [1] The visit by US feminist art critic Lucy Lippard in 1975 provided the immediate impetus for the creation of the new movement in Australia. She spoke to women-only groups in Melbourne and Adelaide about the creation of archives of women artists' work on photographic slides, known as slide registers, by a network of American women artists who called themselves the West-East Bag (WEB); the idea was to counteract their lack of showing in art galleries. [2]
Run as collectives, the groups facilitated consciousness-raising studio and exhibition workshops, aiming to analyse the political implications of personal experiences in visual art. Like their international counterparts, the groups used non-judgemental consciousness-raising (CR) methods which had grown from women's liberation movement. By the mid-1980s, the WAM was a highly respected art movement, both across Australia and worldwide. [2]
The 1974 exhibition A Room of One’s Own: Three Women Artists, co-curated by Kiffy Rubbo, Lynne Cook and Janine Burke, helped initiate the Melbourne WAM. The following year, Rubbo commissioned Burke to curate the national touring exhibition Australian Women Artists 1840–1940. [3] [4] The gallery hosted international feminist art critic, Lucy Lippard, who delivered a talk to a women-only audience. Melbourne's Women's Art Forum and Women's Art Register were subsequently established in the gallery. [5] [6] [7]
Beginning with its first meeting in April 1974 [8] and inspired by Linda Nochlin’s essay "Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?", the Sydney WAM, founded in 1975, [2] aimed to address discrimination and sexism within the art world through various actions and exhibitions. [9]
Marie McMahon was a founding member, [2] Vivienne Binns, Barbara Hall, Frances Phoenix, Beverley Garlick, Jude Adams and Toni Robertson, were at the forefront of the development of The Women's Art Movement in Sydney. [10]
In Adelaide, the Women's Art Group was established in 1976 or 1977 (initially in 1976 as the Women's Art Group or WAG, which aimed to set up a slide register as Melbourne WAM had done), [2] co-founded by Ann Newmarch (who had also been a founding member of the Adelaide Progressive Art Movement in 1974), [11] in order to support and promote women artists, and to work together to combat sexism in the arts and society. Fifty women of a wide range of ages attended the first meeting. For the whole month of August 1977, it hosted The Women's Show, which was a national event in both scope and participation. Hosted by the Experimental Art Foundation, it included theatre, music, film, photography, poetry and literature, media, a conference and a visual art exhibition, [2] and included over 350 works, [12] curated by Julie Ewington (as of 2021 [update] on the board of the 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art in Sydney [13] ), and Helen James. [14] Participating artists included Stephanie Radok, Loene Furler, Bonita Ely, Jude Adams, Margaret Dodd, Frances Budden (later Phoenix), Marie McMahon, and many others. [15]
WAM members included Anne Marsh, Frances Phoenix, Jenny Boult, Polly Siems, Jane Kew, Kate Millington, Phil McKillup, [16] and Jacky Redgate was actively involved. [17]
Some time after its establishment, the Adelaide group gained some funding from the South Australia Arts Grant Advisory Committee, the Community Arts Board, and the Visual Arts Board. This funding allowed for the publication of the book Women's Art Movement 1978-1979, Adelaide, South Australia, in 1980. [1] [18]
There was also a strong Aboriginal women's art component, and its constitution was altered to reflect this. Adelaide members exhibited their work in other states, and some went abroad: [16] Jane Kent [19] and Anne Marsh went to California in 1984 to look at performance art, publishing a book on their findings afterwards. [20] The group was involved in a diverse range of activities including the Adelaide Festival of Arts and its Adelaide Writers' Week, and supported artists-in-residence such as Jill Orr and Bettye Saar. [16]
The State Library of South Australia holds records pertaining to the Adelaide branch between 1974 and 1986 in its collection. [16]
Lynne Cooke is an Australian-born art scholar. Since August 2014 she has been the Senior Curator, Special Projects in Modern Art, at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.
Lucy Rowland Lippard is an American writer, art critic, activist, and curator. Lippard was among the first writers to argue for the "dematerialization" at work in conceptual art and was an early champion of feminist art. She is the author of 21 books on contemporary art and has received numerous awards and accolades from literary critics and art associations.
Janine Burke is an Australian author, art historian, biographer, novelist and photographer. She also curates exhibitions of historical and contemporary art. She is Honorary Senior Fellow, Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne. She was born in Melbourne in 1952.
Vivienne Joyce Binns is an Australian artist known for her contribution to the Women's Art Movement in Australia, her engagement with feminism in her artwork, and her active advocacy within community arts. She works predominantly in painting.
Hossein Valamanesh was an Iranian-Australian contemporary artist who lived and worked in Adelaide, South Australia. He worked in mixed media, printmaking, installations, and sculpture. He often collaborated with his wife, Angela Valamanesh.
Australian feminist art timeline lists exhibitions, artists, artworks and milestones that have contributed to discussion and development of feminist art in Australia. The timeline focuses on the impact of feminism on Australian contemporary art. It was initiated by Daine Singer for The View From Here: 19 Perspectives on Feminism, an exhibition and publishing project held at West Space as part of the 2010 Next Wave Festival.
Ann Foster Newmarch, known as "Annie", was a South Australian painter, printmaker, sculptor and academic, with an international reputation, known for her community service to art, social activism and feminism. She co-founded the Progressive Art and the Women's Art Movement (WAM) in Adelaide, and is especially known for her iconic 1978 colour screenprint piece titled Women Hold Up Half the Sky!.
West-East Bag (WEB) was an international women artists network active from 1971 to 1973.
The Women’s Art Register is Australia's living archive of women's art practice. It is a national artist-run, not-for-profit community and resource in Melbourne, Australia.
Kristin "Kiffy" Dattilo Rubbo (1944–1980) was an Australian gallery director and curator.
Frances Phoenix (1950–2017) was an Australian feminist artist known for needlework and poster designs. Phoenix contributed to the Women's Art Movement groups in both Sydney and Adelaide, as well as multiple community art projects.
Art Almanac is a monthly guide to galleries, news and awards in Australia established in 1974.
Toni Robertson is a visual artist, art historian and printmaker from Sydney, Australia. She is known for her poster making and involvement in the Earthworks Poster Collective, which operated out of the "Tin Shed" art workshops at the University of Sydney.
Elizabeth Gower is an Australian abstract artist who lives and works in Melbourne. She is best known for her work in paper and mixed-media monochrome and coloured collages, drawn from her sustained practice of collecting urban detritus.
Jacky Redgate is an Australian-based artist who works as a sculptor, an installation artist, and photographer. Her work has been recognised in major solo exhibitions surveying her work has been included in many group exhibitions in Australia, Japan and England. Her works are included in major Australian galleries including the National Gallery and key state galleries.
Mandy Martin was a contemporary Australian painter, printmaker and teacher. She was involved in the development of feminist art in Australia from the mid-1970s and as exhibited widely in Australia and internationally. In recent years she used the art she created as part of the ongoing debate on climate change, an area in which she was "prolifically active". Based in Canberra for many years, she was also a lecturer at the Australian National University (ANU) School of Art from 1978 to 2003. As well as being a visual artist, Martin was an adjunct professor at the Fenner School of Environment and Society at the ANU College of Medicine, Biology and Environment.
Australian poster collectives were artist collectives established in the late 1960s, 70s and 80s in the capital cities of Australia, largely led by women and focused on various forms of political activism.
Geoffrey Bartlett is an Australian sculptor working in Melbourne. Bartlett's career in sculpture has spanned over almost 50 years since 1973. He is known for both his studio-based works and major public commissions in sculpture. Bartlett's work has been noted for its contribution to modern Australia sculpture. In 2007, the National Gallery of Victoria held a major retrospective on Bartlett's work since 1987.
The George Paton Gallery, formerly the Ewing and George Paton Gallery, was founded in Melbourne in the mid 1970s at the University of Melbourne Student Union.
The Institute of Modern Art (IMA) is a public art gallery located in the Judith Wright Arts Centre in the Brisbane inner-city suburb of Fortitude Valley, which features contemporary artworks and showcases emerging artists in a series of group and solo exhibitions. Founded in 1975, the gallery does not house a permanent collection, but also publishes research, exhibition catalogues and other monographs. Liz Nowell has been the director of the gallery since 2019.
...an edited extract from the new book Australian Art Exhibitions: Opening Our Eyes published by Thames & Hudson. I
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