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The advertising for GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRLS tells us that this is the first time in nine years that Norbert Leo Butz has brought his show back to 54 Below. The same advertising says the show is ...
In 1985, a group of anonymous women artists came together under the moniker the Guerrilla Girls, taking the art world to task for its abominable representation—or rather, the lack thereof—of ...
The official mascot of the Guerrilla Girls, in fact. This looming inflatable crowns “Laugh, Cry, Fight,” the first-ever L.A. exhibition for the famed anonymous art collective of rebellious women.
The Guerrilla Girls’ art is displayed in major museums worldwide, including the Tate Modern in London, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, and the National Museum of Women in the ...
The Guerrilla Girls formed partly in response to a 1984 exhibit at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, whose curator stated that anyone who wasn’t in the show needed to “rethink his career.” ...
It was a fitting backdrop for Black Girls in Art Spaces’ first gathering of the year. The arts community founded by Dallas resident Kaci Merriwether-Hawkins exists to champion the work of Black ...
Black Girls In Art Spaces (BGIAS), a fast-growing community for Black women to explore the arts and champion Black artists, has expanded from an initial meetup at a Dallas art gallery to more two ...
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