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Women in the Visual Arts
by Eric Tomlin and Rachel Millard
DEFINITION OF MODERN ART
Modernist art is defined as a reaction by artists to industrialization, urbanization, and
nationalism. The combination of euphoria and alienation present at the end of the 19th
century swept over the next few decades, heightened by both World Wars and the Great
Depression. Art reflected this conflicted mind-set. Early 20th century artists challenged
traditional notions of art and its purpose in society. This led to the rise of diverse
movements from Fauvism to Dada, and several others.
ARTISTS
Meret Oppenheim: 1913-1985. Oppenheim went to Paris at 18 to become an artist. She
was invited to exhibit with the Surrealists in 1933 by Giacometti and Jean Arp. Her
piece, Object (Le Dejeuner en fourrure is a good example of the Surrealist goal to
transform the familiar or mundane into the strange and fantastic.
Georgia O’Keeffe: 1887-1986. She is one of the greatest American painters of the 20th
century. She ignored the styles of the European abstract movements. She is most known
for her flower paintings. Many of her paintings are thought to be referencing the vagina;
however, O’Keeffe declared that her work was aesthetic, not metaphoric.
Frida Kahlo: 1910-1954. Her paintings are characterized by vivid colors and her focus
on the depiction of self. While her works may have formal qualities associated with
Surrealism, Frida thought that her art was self-expression and that the similarities
between her art and that of Surrealism are completely coincidental.
Augusta Savage: 1892-1962. Savage was an African American sculptor associated with
the Harlem Renaissance. She was the first black artist to be elected into the National
Assoc. of Women Painters and Sculptors.
Dorothea Lange: 1895-1965. Lange was an American photojournalist, known mostly for
the Depression-era photographs that were a part of her work for the Farm Security
Administration. She was central to the development of documentary photography.
Anne Goldthwaite: 1969-1944. Goldthwaite was a regionalist painter of the American
South. She is particularly known for her paintings of African Americans and is
considered one of the South’s most important artists.
EUROPEAN ARTIST GROUPS
The Bloomsbury Group: This was an influential English group of writers, painters, and
critics. The only female visual artist who was a member was Vanessa Bell.
Neue Künstlervereinigung München, 1909-1912 & Der Blaue Reiter, 1911-1914: The
Blue Rider was a German avant-garde group, formed by artists from the Munich New
Artist’s Association. Two female members were Natalia Goncharova and Marianne von
Werefkin. Goncharova was a prominent member of the Russian avant-garde who cofounded Neo-Primitivism and was a leader of the Russian Futurists.
Society for Women Artists and Friends of Art: One of the few groups in Europe that
centered on women. It was founded by the German expressionist Kathe Kollwitz.
Société des Artistes Indépendants: Founded in Paris, 1884. It follows the policy “No
jury, no awards,” where there free participation and expression. Modernist women
members include Alexandra Ekster, a founder of Art Deco, and Sonia Delaunay, a cubist
and the first living female artist to have a retrospective exhibition at the Louvre.
AMERICAN EXHIBITIONS AND ARTIST GROUPS
National Association of Women Painters & Sculptors: One of the oldest artist groups
in the U.S., it was founded in 1889 due to the lack of opportunities for women artists.
Society of Independent Artists: Founded in 1917, tt was a juryless group that sponsored
immense exhibitions. Their first show was in 1917 and featured 2500 works, of which
40% were made by women.
Salons of America: This was a branch off group from the Society of Independent Artists.
Women made up about ½ of their artists for the 14 years the group was together.
Whitney Studio Club & the Downtown Gallery: As part of a response to the limited
reception of female artists in earlier galleries, some women opened up art galleries of
their own. Two major examples are Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney’s Whitney Studio
Club, which opened in 1918, and Edith Halpert’s Downtown Gallery (1926).
The Armory Show, 1913: Officially known as The International Exhibition of Modern
Art, this was a New York art exhibit considered to be one of the most significant
moments of American art. It featured about 1250 works by over 300 artists; 16% of
whom were women. The women associated with the show are usually referred to as
“patrons”, although many actually had their own art in the show too.
CRITICISMS
Of Georgia O’Keeffe: Many of O’Keeffe’s critics hailed her art, but mixed into the
accolades was an ever-present sexist notion. She was praised for her intuition and
expression of emotions and beauty. Others were much harsher, giving no credit to her
technique and singular style.
Of Women as a whole: Criticism in this era was largely sexist and ignorant of women
artists’ capabilities. It focused on the passivity and internal nature of women. They
focused on the artists as women first, and as artists second. Andre Breton considered
women as a primal force of awe, a muse, completely unaffected by logic. He saw women
as the main source of creative inspiration; however, it was not for women to express this
force, rather it is for men to interpret and themselves express. Gloria Orenstein wrote
that women surrealists had to fight against the confines of their own surrealist movement.
CONCLUSION
Though there are a handful of critics attempting to study their works, female modernists
are still largely underrepresented in comparison to their male counterparts. As of 2007,
the Museum of Modern Art had 400 works of art and only 14 of them are by women.
Works Cited
“Archive Journeys: Bloomsbury.” Tate Online. 8 April 2008.
< http://www.tate.org.uk/archivejourneys/bloomsburyhtml/group.htm>.
Bocola, Sandro. Timelines – The Art of Modernism, 1870-2000. Cologne:
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Briggs, Berta. “The National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors.” Parnassus
4.4 (Apr. 1932): 33. JSTOR. Simpson Lib., Fredericksburg VA, 8 April 2008
<http://www.jstor.org/stable/770930>.
“Dorothea Lange, Collections.” Oakland Museum of California. 9 April 2008
<http://www.museumca.org/global/art/collections_dorothea_lange.html>.
Fine, Elsa Honig. Women and Art. Montclair, NJ: Allanheld & Schram, 1978.
Graham, Jule. “American Women Artists’ Groups: 1867-1930.” Women’s Art Journal
1.1 (Spring 1980): 7-12. JSTOR. Simpson Lib., Fredericksburg VA, 8 April
2008 <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1358011>.
Kleiner, Fred S., and Christin J. Mamiya. Gardner's Art Through the Ages: the Western
Perspective. 12th ed. Vol. 2. Thomson Wadsworth, 2006.
Mitchell, Marilyn H. "Sexist Art Criticism: Georgia O'Keeffe: a Case Study." Signs 3
(1978): 681-687. JSTOR. 8 Apr. 2008.
“MoMA.org, The Collection.” The Museum of Modern Art. 6 April 2008.
<http://www.moma.org/collection/>.
“‘The Part Played by Women:’ The Gender of Modernism at the Armory Show.” The
1913 Armory Show. 7 April 2008 <http://xroads.virginia.edu/
~MUSEUM/Armory/gender.html>.
Saltz, Jerry. “Where Are All the Women Artists at MoMA?” New York Magazine 18
Nov. 2007. 6 April 2008 < http://nymag.com/arts/art/features/40979/>.
Selz, Peter. Beyond the Mainstream. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Slatkin, Wendy. Women Artists in History: From Antiquity to the Present. 4th ed. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 2001.
Smith, Bernard. Modernism’s History: A study in twentieth-century art and ideas. New
Haven: Yale University Press, 1998.
“Société des Artistes Indépendants.” Société des Artistes Indépendants. 5 April 2008
<http://www.artistes-independants.fr/>.
Swinth, Kirstern. Painting Professionals: women artists and the development of modern
American art, 1870-1930. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina
Press, 2001.