23 May – 1 September 2024
This retrospective is titled Revelations after the unpublished manuscript Judy Chicago wrote and illustrated while making the Dinner Party. The manuscript has been updated with new drawings and published to coincide with this exhibition.
The Dinner Party, created in 1979, is an important cultural and art piece. The original exhibit, a triangular table, place settings for 39 great women, each plate decorated with a vulva and floor tiles citing 999 other great women, cannot be moved from the Centre for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum, because of its fragility. A test plate is included in this exhibition. Test plate for The Dinner Party, Hatshepsut (Born 1503? B.C.), 1979.
On entering the gallery you are faced with a large mural. In the Beginning from Birth Project, 1982. The drawing style is recognisably her own – psychedelic, colour pencil, swirling movement and outlined figures. It subverts, it is a reposte to the male-dominated conventional religious renderings.
Judy Cohen was born in 1939 and changed her ‘patriarchal’ name in 1970, after the city of her birth. Studied at UCLA in the sixties and became a pioneering member of the feminist art movement in the USA. She was challenging the male-dominated art world. Her heavily mystical, feminist philosophy and activism immediately shocked and provoked.
Chicago has addressed themes of the climate crisis, Rainbow Warrior, 1980/2023, and Study for Stranded from The End: A Meditation on Death and Extinction, 2013. Prismacolor on black Arches. Pissing on Nature, 1982. Prismacolor on paper, from PowerPlay (1982-87). Part of a series where Chicago subverts her male subjects and challenges male artists depictions of women. Women and Smoke, 1970s. Images and movies of performances involving bodies painted in vibrant pigments, fire, and plumes of smoke.
What if Women Ruled the World? (2022 – Ongoing) Featuring Nadya Tolokonnikova. This quilt invites participants to collaborate in an interactive work. There is a video booth in the shop. Or visit whatifwomenruledtheworld.com.
At 84, still the activist artist, Judy Chicago continues to further her what were once considered radical views, and shows no sign of slowing down. Through six decades her interdisciplinary practice continues pushing back the patriarchal structure.