WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Museum of Women in the Arts presents Judy Chicago: Circa 75 , on view January 17April 13, 2014. The exhibition features 13 paintings, drawings, sculptures and mixed media works by innovative feminist artist Judy Chicago (b. 1939). Throughout her career, Chicago has been creating art with the intention of influencing and changing societal norms. Her iconic body of work from the 1970s, including preparatory art for The Dinner Party, demonstrates her firm belief in the power of art to highlight womens creativity and overcome traditional gender inequalities. This exhibition honors Chicagos commitment to feminist ideals on the occasion of her 75th birthday.
Judy Chicago has been a friend and ally to the National Museum of Women in the Arts since its opening in 1987, said NMWA Director Susan Fisher Sterling. Given Chicagos commitment to honoring women, it is fitting that she be fêted at the sole museum in the world devoted to the creative contributions of women.
Born Judy Cohen in Chicago, this pioneering feminist artist jettisoned her birth and married surnames in 1970, legally adopting the neutral Chicago. This act of independence ushered in a decade of artistic innovation and exploration. This exhibition examines a selection of her art that paralleled and influenced the U.S. feminist movement of the 1970s.
On view in Judy Chicago: Circa 75 is a work from the Pasadena Lifesavers series of paintings from 196970, marking Chicagos break with the often emotionally disconnected aesthetic of Minimalism. Seeking to convey what it was like to be a woman through abstracted forms, Chicago perfected the use of spray paint (usually associated with the masculine realm of auto-body work) on canvas, a medium that allowed her to create shapes that appear to turn, dissolve, pulse and vibrate, evoking emotional and physical sensations.
During this decade, Chicago also developed vivid, abstract central core imagery constructing pictorial space from the center of the compositionseeking to create a new abstract visual vocabulary that she felt more adequately expressed a womans point of view. Along with this new imagery, Chicago wanted to reclaim forgotten women from the annals of history, literally making them visible through art.
Driven by her realization that too much of womens cultural production has been lost, Chicago began researching women in historyartists as well as writers, scientists, womens rights advocates and others. My work is all about overcoming erasure and ensuring that womens achievements become a permanent part of our cultural history, said Chicago.
This mission would find its ultimate manifestation in The Dinner Party, completed in 1979. She created a series of artworks recognizing Great Ladies of the past, which culminated in the iconic installation, which is now housed permanently at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum. Great Ladies works on view in Circa 75 include preparatory drawings (Emily Dickinson and Virginia Woolf) and a test plate (Virginia Woolf) made for The Dinner Party.