RIDGEFIELD, CONN.- The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum announced the list of twenty-six emerging artists participating in the landmark presentation of 52 Artists: Revisiting a Feminist Milestone, on view June 4, 2022 to January 8, 2023. The exhibition celebrates the fifty-first anniversary of the historic exhibition Twenty Six Contemporary Women Artists, curated by Lucy R. Lippard and presented at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in 1971. 52 Artists will showcase work by the artists included in the original 1971 exhibition, alongside a new roster of twenty-six female identifying or nonbinary emerging artists that were born in or after 1980, tracking the evolution of feminist art practices over the past five decades. The new generation of artists included in the exhibition are:
Leilah Babirye Phoebe Berglund LaKela Brown Lea Cetera Susan Chen Pamela Council Lizania Cruz Amaryllis DeJesus Moleski Florencia Escudero Alanna Fields Emilie L. Gossiaux Ilana Harris-Babou Loie Hollowell Maryam Hoseini Hannah Levy Catalina Ouyang Anna Park Erin M. Riley LJ Roberts Aya Rodriguez-Izumi Aliza Shvarts Astrid Terrazas Tourmaline Rachel Eulena Williams Kiyan Williams Stella Zhong
The new artists, who are all based in New York City, will have not had a major solo museum exhibition in the United States as of March 1, 2022, aligning both with The Aldrichs mission of representing the work of emerging artists and with Lippards original mandate for the 1971 exhibition. 52 Artists will encompass the entirety of the Museum (approx. 8,000 sq. ft)the first exhibition to do so since The Aldrichs new building was inaugurated in 2004. The exhibition is organized by The Aldrichs Senior Curator Amy Smith-Stewart and independent curator Alexandra Schwartz, with The Aldrichs Curatorial Assistant Caitlin Monachino.
52 Artists: Revisiting a Feminist Milestone is one of our most ambitious exhibitions to date, said Cybele Maylone, Executive Director of The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. The exhibition charts the Museums commitment to emerging and underrepresented artists over time, and offers an unparalleled opportunity for vital scholarship about the historic legacy of the 1971 exhibition. We are delighted to bring together this exceptional roster of artists for this timely and important show.
On view at The Aldrich from April 18 to June 13, 1971, Twenty Six Contemporary Women Artists was organized by writer, art critic, activist, and curator Lucy R. Lippard, who viewed curating this landmark exhibition as an activist gesture. In its catalogue, she states: I took on this show because I knew there were many women artists whose work was as good or better than that currently being shown, but who, because of the prevailingly discriminatory policies of most galleries and museums, can rarely get anyone to visit their studios or take them as seriously as their male counterparts. With this exhibition, Lippard arguably founded feminist curatorial practice in this country.
52 Artists will survey this landmark exhibition, including works of art from the original exhibition and recreations of some of the more ephemeral pieces, and, if neither are available, related works from the same period. The exhibition will also include recent works by many of the original artists, examining how their practices have evolved over the past fifty years. By showing the original group alongside emerging artists of today, the exhibition will testify both to the historic impact of Lippards milestone exhibition and the influence of the original twenty-six artists she presented at The Aldrich on a new generation of artists.
Lippards original 1971 exhibition at The Aldrich was one of the first institutional responses to the issue of women artists invisibility in museums and galleries. More specifically, the show offered a rejoinder to the protests by the Ad Hoc Women Artists Committee (founded by Poppy Johnson, Brenda Miller, Faith Ringgold, and Lucy Lippard) over the absence of women in the Whitney Museum of American Arts 1970 Sculpture Annual. Twenty Six Contemporary Women Artists opened the floodgates to a host of other feminist exhibitions throughout the 1970s, signaling Lippards emergence as a visionary feminist curator and critic and marking the debut of many groundbreaking artists. 52 Artists not only celebrates this radical exhibition but underscores its ongoing influence on future generations of artists.
The original 1971 catalogue was designed by architect and scholar Susana Torre. A new, 200-page softcover book designed by Gretchen Kraus, The Aldrichs Design Director, and co-published with Gregory R. Miller & Co., will accompany the exhibition. This significant catalogue will include new essays by Lippard, Smith-Stewart, and Schwartz, as well as rare historical documentation of the original exhibition, images, installation views, and checklists from both the 1971 and 2022 shows.