- Source: Women Artists in Revolution
- Voice of Baceprot
- Pauline Auzou
- Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar
- ChatGPT
- Maria Raevskaia-Ivanova
- Hijab
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
- Billie Eilish
- Yayoi Kusama
- Les Nabis
- Women Artists in Revolution
- Women artists
- !Women Art Revolution
- The Dinner Party
- Women in the Cuban Revolution
- National Museum of Women in the Arts
- Lists of women artists
- Faith Ringgold
- Art Workers' Coalition
- Ad Hoc Committee of Women Artists
Women Artists in Revolution (WAR) was a New York City-based collective of American women artists and activists that formed in 1969. They seceded from the male-dominated Art Workers' Coalition (AWC), prompted by the Whitney Museum of American Art's 1969 Annual (later the Whitney Biennial), which included only eight women out of the 143 featured artists shown.
In 1970, WAR members sent letters to the Whitney Museum, as well as the Museum of Modern Art, demanding both museums change their policies to be more inclusive of women artists. That same year, the Ad Hoc Committee of Women Artists formed and also concentrated on the discrimination of women in the Whitney Museum's annual survey exhibitions. These protest efforts led to an increase of women artists at the next Whitney Annual, rising from an average of 5–10% before 1969 to 22% in 1970.
In 1971, some members of WAR, along with a group called Feminists in the Arts, created the Women's Interart Center, the first alternative feminist space, where they established a graphics and silk-screen workshop taught by the artist Jacqueline Skiles. By 1972, WAR abandoned their efforts to change museum policies and focused more on consciousness-raising that concerned the struggles of women artists. In 1973, two former members of WAR—Mary Ann Gillies and Joan Glueckman—co-founded SOHO 20 Gallery.
Notable former members
Muriel Castanis
Silvianna Goldsmith
Juliette Gordon
Doloris Holmes
Poppy Johnson
Jan McDevitt
Faith Ringgold
Sara Saporta
Jacqueline Skiles
Nancy Spero
Joan Thorne
References
External links
Archives of American Art, "Women Artists in Revolution records, 1970-1978," accessed March 6, 2016.
Suzanne Lundgren, Review of !WAR Women Art Revolution, documentary film, 2012, accessed March 12, 2016.