Difference between revisions of "Feminist art"

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* ''She Laughs Back: Feminist Wit in 1970s Bay Area Art', eds. Elaine O'Brien and Kelly Lindner, Sacramento: University Galleries, California State University Sacramento, 2024, 131 pp. [https://events.csus.edu/She-Laughs-Back-Feminist-Wit-in-1970s-Bay-Area-Art/E169408336 Exhibition].
 
* ''She Laughs Back: Feminist Wit in 1970s Bay Area Art', eds. Elaine O'Brien and Kelly Lindner, Sacramento: University Galleries, California State University Sacramento, 2024, 131 pp. [https://events.csus.edu/She-Laughs-Back-Feminist-Wit-in-1970s-Bay-Area-Art/E169408336 Exhibition].
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* Erin Dickey, ''[https://doi.org/10.17615/11yq-p815 "Bad Information": Networks, Knowledges, and Feminist Art in the 1980s]'', Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina, 2024, 405 pp. PhD thesis.
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==

Revision as of 21:13, 10 January 2025

Publications, resources

  • Feminist Art Base, a digital archive of activity by artists from the 1960s to the early 2000s; built and hosted by Brooklyn Museum (2007-2014)
  • Otherwise: Imagining Queer Feminist Art Histories, eds. Amelia Jones and Erin Silver, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015, 424 pp. Publisher.
  • Katy Deepwell, Agata Jakubowska (eds.), All-Women Art Spaces in Europe in the Long 1970s, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2018, vi+285 pp. TOC. Review: Nouril (Women's Art J), Coelho (Diacrítica). [1]
  • She Laughs Back: Feminist Wit in 1970s Bay Area Art', eds. Elaine O'Brien and Kelly Lindner, Sacramento: University Galleries, California State University Sacramento, 2024, 131 pp. Exhibition.

See also

Cyberfeminism, Women in concrete poetry, Video art, Performance art, Institutional critique, Video activism, Art and activism