
The Art Angle Do We Still Need All-Woman Art Shows?
Nov 13, 2025
Alison M. Gingeras, a curator and art historian who recently organized The Woman Question exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, delves into the historical and contemporary landscape of women artists. She explores the origins of the 'woman question' from Christine de Pizan to the self-portraits of artists like Artemisia Gentileschi. Alison discusses forgotten female artists and the evolving dynamics of all-women exhibitions, while emphasizing the importance of inclusivity and the continuous narrative of women in art.
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Art As Assertion Of Agency
- Artemisia Gentileschi's Susanna signals a new genre of women painting active resistance rather than passive nudes.
- The work links personal experience, public trial, and a visual language of female agency in Baroque art.
Self-Portrait Began With Women
- The earliest palette self-portrait was made by a woman, Catherine van Hemmensen, in 1548, reframing the genre's origins.
- Palette portraits encode professional knowledge and advertise artistic authority rather than mere self-celebration.
The 'Big Lie' Of Art History
- Many pre-19th-century women artists trained only within artist families due to exclusion from formal education.
- Art history textbooks then systematically omitted these women, creating a false narrative of absence.

