The Heckscher Museum of Art

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The Heckscher Museum of Art EXHIBITION GUIDE FOR TEACHERS December 5, 2015 - April 3, 2016 Ce Roser, Solar Talent, 1980, Oil on canvas. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Jens Jebsen. Ce Roser Audrey Flack, Lady Madonna, 1972, Lithograph on paper with gold leaf. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Mandel. Courtesy of the Louis K. Meisel Gallery & Audrey Flack. WHAT S INSIDE 2 Prime Avenue Huntington, NY 11743 631.351.3250 Heckscher.org Education Department 631.351.3214 Education@Heckscher.org About the Exhibition...1 Exhibition-Related Vocabulary...2 Exhibition-Related Websites & Books...3 Select Images...4 Access More Exhibition Guides @ Heckscher.org...10

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION Over the past several years, The Heckscher Museum of Art has mounted a series of exhibitions that have explored various aspects of the Permanent Collection. Like most public institutions, the Museum s holdings are predominantly comprised of work by male artists. The cultural environment in the western world may seem gender neutral today, yet female artists throughout history faced numerous challenges not experienced by their male colleagues. The scholarly studies by feminist historians like Linda Nochlin and others of the 1970s explored some of the many obstacles faced by women artists until the late-19th century, most notably the lack of access to formal training, the conventions that prevented them from Guerrilla Girls, The Advantages of Being a Woman Artist, 1988. studying the nude model at a time when depiction of the human figure was crucial to artistic achievement, and a social setting that situated women firmly in the domestic realm as wives, mothers, and guardians of the home. Although women achieved more freedoms in the early-20th century, most significantly the right to vote, they continued to compete for recognition within a system of galleries, museums, and universities dominated by men. Artists of the 1970s addressed the plight of the female artist and the patriarchy of the art establishment in protests at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and elsewhere. Howardeena Pindell, Ce Roser, and many others joined together to form numerous activist organizations and cooperative galleries that provided women artists an opportunity to network, exhibit their work, and advance their cause to end discrimination against women in the arts. Early feminist artists like Miriam Schapiro and Judy Chicago challenged traditional boundaries by incorporating crafts traditionally associated with women in their work, drawing upon the long history of women in the applied arts. Others, such as May Stevens and Audrey Flack, worked within traditional mediums to challenge male authority in overt or subtle ways. Most women, however, created art similar in form and content to that of their male colleagues, as reflected in the majority of work by women artists in the Museum s collection. While artists such as Emma Stebbins, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Georgia O Keeffe, Esphyr Slobodkina, Betty Parsons, and Jane Wilson achieved widespread recognition for their artistic and cultural accomplishments, many others, less well known, produced equally significant work that broadens our visual and intellectual experience, as evidenced by the artists in You Go Girl!. - 1 -

EXHIBITION-RELATED VOCABULARY abstract art: A work of art that does not depict a person, place, or thing as it appears in the real world; abstract art focuses on colors, shapes, lines, and the use of imagination. documentary photography: A form of photography that chronicles significant and historical events. The photographer attempts to capture truthful, objective, and usually candid images of a particular subject, often people. homage: A work of art in which an artist shows respect to another by allusion or imitation. landscape: A work of art depicting an outdoor place. mood: The feeling or emotion a work of art conveys to the viewer. negative space: The space not occupied by the subject of a work of art, or the empty space (opposite of positive space). pattern: The regular repetition of colors, lines, shapes, or other elements in a work of art. printmaking: A technique in which the artist creates an image on a plate using a variety of processes. This image is then transferred or "printed" on paper, often using a printing press. Printmaking allows for the creation of multiple impressions of the same image. repetition: The use of the same elements over and over again in a work of art. sculpture: A three-dimensional work of art made using a technique such as carving, chiseling, molding, welding, or combining found objects. still life: A work of art depicting an arrangement of objects, typically including fruit and flowers and objects contrasting with these in texture, such as bowls and glassware. symmetry: The balance in size, form, or arrangement of parts on opposite sides of a plane, line, or point. Types of symmetry include reflection, rotation, and translation. reflection rotation translation line of reflection texture: The surface quality or "feel" of an object (ex: roughness, smoothness, softness). Texture may be implied (only visually suggesting texture, not to the touch) or actual. value: The lightness or darkness of a color. - 2 -

EXHIBITION-RELATED WEBSITES & BOOKS WEBSITES American Women Artists https://americanwomenartists.org Guerrilla Girls http://www.guerrillagirls.com/interview National Museum of Women in the Arts http://nmwa.org Georgia O'Keeffe http://www.okeeffemuseum.org Miriam Schapiro Miriam Schapiro http://www.artnews.com/2015/06/23/miriam-schapiro-pioneering-feminist-artist-dies-at-91 Esphyr Slobodkina http://www.slobodkinafoundation.org/about May Stevens http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/14/may-stevens_n_5649294.html Jane Wilson http://www.tfaoi.com/aa/2aa/2aa395.htm BOOKS The Obstacle Race: The Fortunes of Women Painters and Their Work by Germaine Greer Women Artists, 1550-1950 by Ann Sutherland Harris, Linda Nochlin Women Artists: An Illustrated History by Nancy G. Heller Danger! Women Artists at Work by Debra N. Mancoff - 3 -

Elaine DeKooning, Black Mountain #6, 1948, Enamel on paper mounted on canvas. Heckscher Museum of Art; Museum Purchase. - 4 -

Mary Callery, Tree, n.d., Brass. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of the Estate of Mary Callery. - 5 -

Miriam Schapiro, Berthe Morisot & Me, early 1970s, Collage. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of Drs. Constance and Lee Koppelman. - 6 -

Marguaerite Zorach, Moonlight, 1910, Oil on panel. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of the Baker/Pisano Collection. The Zorach Collection, LLC - 7 -

May Stevens, Big Daddy Paper Doll, 1971, Serigraph on paper. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Orlinsky. - 8 -

Betty Parsons, Gulf of Mexico, c. 1951, Oil and gouache on masonite. Heckscher Museum of Art; Gift of the Betty Parsons Foundation. - 9 -

EXPLORE IMAGINE CREATE The Museum s ProtoZone interactive technology was made possible through a grant from Ronald McDonald House Charities New York Tri-State Area. Everything you need @ Heckscher.org Access ALL of the Museum's EXHIBITION GUIDES for TEACHERS Get a sneak peek, review after a visit, or use anytime at school! Guides feature full-color artwork images, exhibition-related websites, and more! They are created on a rolling basis for all* exhibits on view September through June. Teachers registered for K-12 programs are e-mailed the guide(s) that coordinate with the scheduled program as soon as they are developed. *A guide is not available for Long Island's Best. Newly Redesigned, User-Friendly, Now Available @ heckscher.org/education_exhibition_guides_for_teachers 2 Prime Avenue Huntington, NY 11743 631.351.3250 Heckscher.org Education Department 631.351.3214 Education@Heckscher.org DIGITAL ACTION PAINTING At Home Art Activity Ideas! HUEY is always sharing fun activities on his facebook page. Like him at facebook.com/hueyheckscher Like & follow @heckschermuseum - 10 -