Online ReferencePrint Reference
Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Guide 
Washington University Libraries Save Time! Ask Us

Admin Sign In 

ARTARCH 415 Feminist Art and Theory, 1970 to Present  Tags: art_history feminist women gender  

Research guide for Dr. Rebecca DeRoo's course ArtArch 415, Feminist Art and Theory, 1970 to Present (Fall 2008)
Last update: Oct 27th, 2008 URL: http://libguides.wustl.edu/feminist_art  Print Guide  RSS Updates

Home             Print Page
  

Resources and Services

 

Off Campus Access

While some of the resources in this guide are freely available, most research databases and electronic journals and many online library services have access restrictions that require that you be a current Washington University student, faculty member, or staff member. See this page for help.

 
 

Welcome

This is the library research guide for Professor Rebecca DeRoo's course Feminist Art and Theory, 1970 to Present, Art History & Archaeology 415.

Please let Kasia Leousis know if you have any questions about the guide, WU Library services, or research in art history.

 

Course Description (WebSTAC)

How have feminist artists and theorists challenged the conventions of art history? This course begins with the feminist art world activism that arose in the 1970s in the context of the women´s liberation movement. During this time, feminist artists sought to establish new forms of art education, venues for exhibiton, and creative working methods to provide alternatives to traditional art world institutions (which were often seen as ill-suited or unreceptive). We will examine how current artists, building on this recent history, continue to develop feminist aesthetics and politics in a variety of contemporary practices, including installation art, body art, performance art, and video. We will read texts by Griselda Pollock, Linda Nochlin, Lucy Lippard, Carolee Schneemann, Helene Cixous, Laura Mulvey, Lisa Tickner, Judith Butler, Adrian Piper, and Helen Moelsworth, among others, and discuss the relationship between feminist theory and artistic creativity.

 

 

Librarian

Profile ImageKasia Leousis


Online Chat / Networks:

Contact Info:
Art & Architecture LIbrary
Kemper Museum Building
314-935-4377
Send Email

Subjects:
Art History, Studio Arts, Romance Languages & Literatures

 
Description

  Loading content... please wait