Monday, 27 November 2023

Women in Revolt-catalogue of Tate Britain show.

Women in Revolt is a new show at Tate Britain, Nov 8 2023 to April 7 2024, then at National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh 25 May 2024 to 26 Jan 2025 and at The Whitworth in Manchester 7 March to 24 August 2025 Subtitled’Art and Activism 1970-1990’ The catalogue has a brown cover - unimpressively discreet I thought - conveying a quiet unimpressive revolution. Linsey Young, the curator, introduces the show with personal details about her mother’s feminism, dedicating the show to her memory, reminding those of us who were artists then of the difficulties and energetic efforts of the women who formed organisations and made personal political works and the part played by black women. She claims that there are contemporary women artists carrying on the feminist fight - but I find it hard to think of any. Amy Tobin writes about the groups formed and collective ways of working, mentioning Brixton Women’s Work to which I contributed in 3 shows. It’s a thrill for me to read of artists I met then like the inspiring Kate Walker and calm tower of strength Rita Keegan who worked with the black women artists but I am disappointed that the illustrations are mostly of posters and photos of women in groups not showing the actual content of the shows. Three of the ten chapters are about black and Asian artists and one about transexuality. There are quite a lot of illustrations of women’s work but the notes about them are in very small grey print grey making them tedious to read. An example is the two pages on Bobby Baker.There is room on the second page about her to print the words twice as big rather than stylishly cramping them up at one edge to leave a blank area larger than the text. Thus the design of the catalogue replicates the lack of space given to the women’s movement in the art world. Many of the artists named are still alive and said to be working which points out how little we hear of them now and this show fails to give much reference to their current projects. There are new names and organisations to me even though I was an active feminist artist in this era in London. I have met only a few of these artists and several more whose names and art is sadly not included. The text is the tip of an iceberg that has largely melted away but has been important in art history nevertheless. It’s a worthwhile thing to have made the show and hopefully the images in Tate Britain will make more impact than they can in this catalogue, which will remain to mark the history or as we used to say ‘herstory.

1 comment:

  1. I do apologize that blogger obliterates my carefully considered paragraphs-tried to get round this by loading each separately with gaps but its put it all back together with no spaces.

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