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Blog: A Muse and Her Artist Topics:Art, Creativity, Women Helen Klebesadel original watercolor paintings, fabrics, and prints
Category Archives: Feminist art
Susan Grabel: Art that Explores the Human Dimension of Social Issues
Susan Grabel’s recent retrospective at the Staten Island Art Museum offered an exhibition that recognized her 35 plus years of creating art with a social purpose, and brought together works representing the feminist critique of contemporary culture that has brought a larger meaning to her creative work her throughout her career. Continue reading
New paintings by Mary Kay Neumann, ‘Art Still Has Truth, Take Refuge There’
In her new exhibition Mary Kay Neumann’s wet-into-wet watercolor florals are alive with emotions of joy, conflict, and and the intrinsic beauty of life. Continue reading
Posted in Ability, Art Techniques, donating art, Fabulous Artists, Feminist art, Inspiration, Uncategorized, Watercolor, Wisconsin Arts
Tagged Mary Kay Neumann, watercolor
5 Comments
Breaking the Isolation of the Artist Studio Through Collaboration or Playing Nicely With Others
I love nothing better than working in my art studio alone. I hunger for it. I work hard to protect my art time from other obligations. I can spend endless hours painting, creating, and seeking that place of flow that is timeless and thrilling. It is my favorite thing to do right up until it becomes lonely, oppressive, and isolating. Continue reading
Posted in art and technology, art collaboration, Artist Resources, Beauty, Biographical, Fablous Artists, Feminist art, Fiber arts. Fabric design, Inspiration, Spoonflower, Teaching Art and Creativity, Watercolor, Women Artists, Workshops and Classes
Tagged artist collaboration, collaboration, creativity workshop, Edenfred, Fiber arts, Frank Lloyd Wright, Leslee Nelson, Liese Pfeifer, Nikki Kinne, recycled art workshop, sculpture workshop, Spoonflower, watercolor workshop, Wyoming Valley School
10 Comments
A Beauty Manifesto: Art As Resistance”
“The making of beauty and of art says that we are alive and we have this beauty within us.” Ann Schaffer, artist Continue reading
Activist Art: Art That Works
Activist art is, by definition, historically specific. It aims to address particular cultural, political and social concerns with a view to producing concrete social change. It is interesting to me as an artist and an educator how seldom we find an analysis of what makes effective activist art a part of what we teach and learn, especially since we need it now more than ever. Continue reading
Posted in Activist Art, Artist Resources, Diversity, Fablous Artists, Feminist art, Fiber arts. Fabric design, Inspiration, Political Art, Teaching Art and Creativity, This and That, Wisconsin Arts, Women Artists
Tagged activist art, collaboration, feminist art, Feminist Art Movement, Feminist Art Project, Fiber arts, political art, Wisconsin
6 Comments
Making Art out of Hardship: Remembering the Artist and Activist Rae Atira-Soncea (1953-2009)
The only way to properly mourn a person like Rae Atira-Soncea is to organize opportunities to recognize her creative work and to bring people together to figure out how to put their creative thinking into action. There were many ways people knew Rae personally and professionally, and all of them reflected an acknowledgment of her fierce commitment to positive social change through community building and creative actions that acknowledge the integrity and potential of all individuals. Continue reading
The Feminist Art Movement
The Feminist Art Movement profoundly influenced contemporary art practices. It introduced feminist content and gender issues; nonhierarchical uses of materials and techniques; and the idea of a multiple-voiced, fluid subject. The women’s art movement has championed the idea that gender is socially and not naturally constructed; validated non-“high art” forms such as craft, video and performance art; questioned the cult of “genius” and “greatness;” and placed an emphasis on pluralist variety rather than concepts of totalizing universalism. Continue reading

