by Polly Guerin
March 31, 2008
LISTEN BROTHER!!! ART BONANZA HONORING
WOMEN!!!!
"The history of women and art is the story of
amazing women's accomplishments" says Molly
Murphy MacGregor, who spearheaded the
National Women's History Project, (NWHP) the
organization that put Women's History Month
during March on our nation's calendar.
So listen up brother, father, uncle, significant
other, this pioneer for women artist's rights,
MacGregor sets the record straight by reclaiming the rightful place for women in the arts, who had
been written out of history and also to honor women artists today. So NWHP in sponsorship with
the A.I.R. Gallery, the home of women in the arts in New York City for 36 years, joined forces
creating the first, month-long series of citywide events focusing on the achievements of women in
the arts. www.nwhp.org.
This year's theme, "Women's Art: Women's Vision" kicked off with a fashionable afternoon high
tea at the Puck Building in Soho honoring about a dozen women whose tenacity, talent and vision
carved out important place for women in the arts. I would have liked to mention here all the
honorees but space does not permit so just to name a few here goes:
So what’s in a name? Plenty if you consider Judy Chicago, whose name was Judy Cohen until
poster's promoting her exhibitions billed her as Judy Chicago, after all she hails from Chicago,
Illinois. A prolific painter, printmaker, tapestry and needlework artist, Judy Chicago's "Dinner
Table" an iconic masterpiece installation of 39 place settings in ceramic plates celebrating women
in history, on tapestry altar cloths is a breathtaking demonstration of a monumental work executed
by 1038 women artists. The next day, after the Pen & Brush event limos whisked us off to
Brooklyn to see the awesome "Dinner Table." Whew!!! It was overwhelming, each place setting a
tribute to women from antiquity to the likes of Georgia O'Keefe. A "Must See" at
www.brooklynmusum.org.
Who said men cornered the market on cartoons? Wrong again, kudos to Rose Cecil O'Neill
(l874-l944) one of the first female cartoonists in America. Illustrator, author and originator, she
created the Kewpie character, those adorable little pixie-like baby figures first appeared in her
illustrated poems for the Ladies' Home Journal. Accepting the NWHP award was the ebullient
supporter of works by O'Neill, Susan K. Scott, curator of the Bonniebrook Historical Society www.
kewpie-museum.com. O'Neill wrote and illustrated eight children's books featuring Kewpies from
1912 to 1936 and Kempie comics appeared in newspapers during those years.
Best known for her painted story quilts, Faith Ringgold, painter, quilter/writer was born in l930 in
Harlem. Today, she is best known for her painted story quilts, art that combines painting quilted
fabric and storytelling. Her art aims to celebrate the uniqueness and commonality of all cultures.
Are there any American Indian artists? You Bet!!! Take Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, she was born
at the Indian Mission on the Flathead Reservation in l940 in Montana. Today she is one of the
most acclaimed artists in her genre. Among Jaune Quick-to-See Smith's remarkable
achievements is the floor design in the Great Hall of the new Denver airport; an in-situ sculpture
piece in Yerba Buena Park San Francisco and a mile-long sidewalk history trail in West Seattle.
Did polio stop Lihua Lei? Nothing doing, this charming young woman, despite her disability,
greets us with an endless beaming smile and joie de vivre. Lihua Lei's multimedia installations
evoke a sense of walking through and being enfolded in the artwork. Born in l966 in Taiwan her
parents were rice farmers. However, unable to stand her job was to sit on the edge of her family's
rice field and scare the scavenging birds away. As an adult, she designs installation art that
explores, defines, and honors the personal experiences of her own life.
A.I.R. Gallery's First Annual Gala Celebration and exhibition following the tea featured works by
l00 women artists, from established art world luminaries such as Yoko Ono and Lorna Simpson to
newly emerging artists. See more at www.airgallery.org.
In sync with the NWHP event, the book "Winning the Vote" The Triumph of the American
Woman Suffrage Movement, by Robert P. J. Cooney, Jr., was showcased at the Pen & Brush Club
which featured ten women artists who, in the early l900s, helped win equal suffrage in the U.S.
www.penandbrush.org. The iconic 496 page, 9x11" lavishly illustrated book tells for the first time
the full story of the multi-faceted suffrage movement which resulted in the ratification of the l9th
Amendment. The author spent l2 years researching and uncovered never before published
photos, archival material and campaign memorabilia. Cooney does not avoid controversial issues
and even includes women who opposed the Suffrage Movement. A "Must Have" for any library,
personal or public. Order from www.nwhp.org or www.AmericanGraphicPress.com.
Well, Ta Ta dear readers. No time to lose. I've got a lot to do, so do you, to rise up and join the
ranks of the women of century, who will leave their mark for future generations to come.

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