Date & Time | Facilitator | Topic | hashtag | Location |
Friday, January 24, 12:10 p.m. | Dana Carlisle Kletchka, curator of education | “Feminism(s) in the Gallery” | #JCfem | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, January 31, 12:10 p.m. | Karen Keifer-Boyd, professor of art education and women’s studies | “Futures of Feminist Pasts” | #JCfuture | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, February 14, 12:10 p.m. | Wanda B. Knight, associate professor of art education and women’s studies | “Mirror, mirror on the Wall, Who’s the Finest of Them All?: D(EVALUATION) of Black Female Beauty” | #JCblack | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, February 28, 1:00 p.m. | Charlotte Houghton, associate professor of art history |
Paper Views Exhibition: Paper Tigress: Graphic Images of Female PowerCurated by Charlotte Houghton | #JCpower | Print Study Room |
Friday, March 21, 12:10 p.m. | Susan Russell, associate professor of theatre | “The Vagina Dialogues” | #JCvagina | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, April 11, 12:10 p.m. | Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor, associate professor of English and women’s studies | “Judy Chicago and the Promise of Utopia”
In this gallery talk Jennifer Wagner-Lawlor explores the utopian strain of Judy Chicago’s thinking and work. Wagner-Lawlor traces Chicago’s anticipation of contemporary definitions of feminist utopianism as a vision of inclusion and/as absolute hospitality, and touches down on other works, such as her Utopia project, that extend her early insights about robust feminist community. |
#JCutopia | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, April 18, 12:10 p.m. | Gabeba Baderoon, assistant professor of women’s studies and African and African American studies | “The Conversation Around the Table: Feminist Art and the Transnational” | #JCtrans | Palmer Museum of Art |
Friday, April 25, 1:00 p.m. | Karen Keifer-Boyd, professor of art education and women’s studies |
Paper Views Exhibition: Judy Chicago Views Curated by Judy Chicago, artist, and Karen Keifer-Boyd.
This iteration of the Palmer Museum of Art’s Paper Views series—titled Judy Chicago Views—represents how Judy Chicago perceives works of art made by women: a matrilineage rather than a patrilineage. Over her lifetime Chicago has seen many, many artworks by women and has found commonalities in themes, issues, and even formal tendencies, such as space around a center.Three salient themes emerged in paring down the number of works for Judy Chicago Views: Revolt and Justice, Body and Identity, and Central Core imagery.
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#JCviews | Print Study Room |
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