Catalogue > By Keyword > feminism
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n.paradoxa’s 12 Step guide to Feminist Art, Art History and Criticism
n.paradoxa's 12 Step Guide to Feminist Art, Art History and Criticism invites readers to ask themselves difficult questions about the visibility of women artists, stereotypes of women artists in canons of art history, and to think about different theoretical approaches to a feminist art history of women artists. It offers further reading on a number of issues including: images of women; women as cultural producers; the politics of feminist art; and distinguishing between art in/of the feminine and feminist art.
This Article can be found in, Miscellaneous articles folder 5A
Feminist and Queer Performance: critical strategies
Feminist and Queer Performance traces a rich personal, political and theatrical history. Mapping the central theoretical strategies of interpretation in feminist and queer studies, and examining the leading performance artists in the field, each chapter responds to and is situated in the lively and compelling debates of the moment.
Feminist Futures? Theatre, Performance, Theory
Feminist Futures? sets out to ask if and in what way feminism remains relevant to theatre and performance practice of the twenty-first century. Responding to this question is an excellent, cross-generational mix of theatre scholars and practitioners whose essays engage in lively, cutting edge critical debates on issues such as citizenship, autobiography, cultural heritage, political agency, and body/technology, as circulating in contemporary feminism and performance today.
History or Not
A presentation in response to an invitation to speak for 15 minutes on Art, Activism and Feminism in the 1970s at '347 minutes… a Conference' at Conway Hall, London, 24.3.2000, held in conjunction with the Whitechapel Exhibition 'Live in Your Head' January – March 2000. Miscellaneous articles, folder 4.
Found in miscellaneous article folder #5A
This item is part of the 'Glimpses of before: 1970s UK Performance Art' Study Room Guide by Helena Goldwater (P2497)
Where is Ana Mendieta? Identity, Performativity, and Exile
Taken from banners carried in a 1992 protest outside the Guggenheim Museum, the title phrase 'Where is Ana Mendieta?' evokes not only the suspicious and tragic circumstances surrounding her death but also the conspicuous absence of women artists from high-profile exhibitions. Drawing on the work of such theorists as Judith Butler, Joseph Roach, Edward Said, and Homi Bhabha, Jane Blocker discusses the power of Mendieta's earth-and-body art to alter, unsettle, and broaden terms of identity itself.
How 2 Become 1 (Laban)
10 minute edit of perfomance
Women of the Underground: Art: Cultural Innovators Speak for Themselves
In a series of twenty-four candid interviews with influential women artists, author Zora von Burden gives some of the most influential cultural innovators of this generation a voice, and probes the depths of how and why they broke through society’s limitations to create works of outstanding measure.
Interview with Martinez on “My Stories, Your Emails”
Short interview on Martinez’ work, her influences, and ambitions
Sleeping Beauty, Part 1, first night
There was once a sleeping woman. She was betrothed at birth, unknowingly. She hid in the forest until she was a true woman. At first glance she fell in love with a noble man. Her heart was taken. A witch tried to kill her and her love. A spell was put on her family and her castle. They all slept for over a hundred years. At last, the noble prince understood and at true love’s kiss she awoke.
Mermaid Show
An unconventional participatory performance.