$49.95$16.95 – Hardcover book / Harmony Books Ny / ISBN:9781400054121
Becoming Judy Chicago
Born to Jewish radical parents in Chicago in 1939, Judy Cohen grew up to be Judy Chicago one of the most daring and controversial artists of her generation. Her works, once disparaged and misunderstood by the critics, have become icons of the feminist movement, earning her a place among the most influential artists of her time. Early to reject the modernist move away from content in art, Chicago first mastered and then transcended modernisms formalist austerity, before blazing a trail to the new esthetic now known as postmodern.
In Becoming Judy Chicago, Gail Levin gives us a biography of uncommon intimacy and depth, revealing the artist as a person and a woman of extraordinary energy and purpose. Drawing upon Chicagos personal letters and diaries, her published and unpublished writings, and more than 250 new interviews with her friends, family, admirers, and critics, Becoming Judy Chicago is a richly detailed and moving chronicle of the artists unique journey from obscurity to fame, including the story of how she found her audience outside the art establishment.
From her early training as a gifted child at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago to the groundbreaking Feminist Art Program she created at Fresno State College in 1970–1971, Chicago has never feared to challenge the status quo. At a time when art history textbooks still omitted work by all women, she led her students on a remarkable journey during which they began to examine the meaning of being a woman, to explore womens traditional crafts, and to compile a history of women artists. For Chicago, no topic has been taboofrom menstruation, pregnancy, and childbirth to mens abuse of power and the Holocaust.
Chicago has revolutionized the way we view art made by and for women. She has fundamentally changed our understanding of womens contributions to art and to society. Influential and bold, The Dinner Party has become a cultural monument. Becoming Judy Chicago tells the story of a great artist, a leader of the womens movement, a tireless crusader for equal rights, and a complicated, vital woman who dared to express her own sexuality in her art and demand recognition from a male-dominated culture.