Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Surrealism, an important artistic style in the 1920s and 1930s, had a number of prominent women artists, including Leonora Carrington, Kay Sage, Dorothea Tanning, and Remedios Varo. [27] There were also outliers, such as the British self-taught, often comedic observer, Beryl Cook (1926–2008).

  2. 8. Marjorie Strider. Marjorie Strider, Girl with Rose, 1963, acrylic on plywood, Gift of John Wilmerding, 2022.153.1. When we think of pop art, Andy Warhol or Roy Lichtenstein may come to mind. But women artists like Marisol and Marjorie Strider also reinterpreted popular culture in the 1950s and ’60s.

  3. People also ask

    • Amy Sherald⁠ Amy Sherald is an American Artist who's known for large scale portraits. She painted the official portrait of former first lady Michelle Obama.
    • Ana Segovia. Ana Segovia lives and works in Mexico City. She creates paintings from film stills, mostly from the Mexican cinema golden era that investigate the performative aspect of the gender as well as the construction of masculinity in massive audiovisual medias.
    • Andrea Bowers. Andrea Bowers is an LA Based, American multi-media artist - she works in video, sculpture, etc. Key themes she explores in her works are around women's’ and workers’ rights to climate change and immigration (source).
    • Anna Park. Anna Park, young emerging artist that lives and works in Brooklyn. Fun fact: she was “discovered” by, KAWS, as he visited the school's open studio exhibition (she went to the New York Academy of Art).
  4. Kiki Smith. Kiki Smith is a West German-born American artist whose work has addressed themes of sex, birth and regeneration. Smith was part of the second wave of feminist art (along with Kruger and Sherman) and found new ways to explore the social, cultural and political roles of women in her work. Smith's later work has become centered on the ...

  5. Jul 16, 2021 · Between 1801 and 1810, women represented between 7 and 15 percent of participating artists. Among the women whose works were displayed at the newly inclusive Salon was Marie Denise Villers (1774–1821). In 1801, she exhibited this portrait of a teenaged artist named Marie Joséphine Charlotte du Val d’Ognes (1786–1868).

  1. People also search for