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The F Word is an all-day symposium being held Friday, October 26 at the Alexander Library Teleconference Room. Registration is required, free and open to all disciplines.
Feminism in the visual arts remains as fiercely
contested today as it was thirty-five years ago. Despite recent backlash
against feminist concerns and even an atmosphere of anti-feminism
among younger scholars, in terms of both artistic representation
and criticism, feminism remains highly relevant. The legacy of 2nd
generation feminism has been explored in several recent art historical
conferences. This symposium seeks to extend this investigation by
examining how feminism currently informs a broad range of discourse
within the visual arts. We hope to create a view of feminism that
acknowledges society's systematic exclusion of minorities as well
as women. This perspective will dispel stereotypical portrayals of
feminists while also examining feminism's relationship to institutional
critique, queer theory, and issues of race, class, and gender. These
issues are distilled in the subjects of body, space, and performance,
which are the three panels that comprise our symposium. We aim both
to reaffirm and re-appraise the state of feminism today and its direction
for the future. Our title invokes the boat-rocking, bold attitudes
of our 2nd generation feminist forebears, whose spirit informs and
inspires this process of new discovery.
Sponsored by:

The Associate Vice President of Academic and Public
Partnerships in the Arts and Humanities,
The Department of Art History

This conference
is co-sponsored by the Institute for Women
and Art. Support has been
provided by a Rutgers University Academic Excellence Fund Award to
the Institute for Women and Art under the auspices of the Associate
Vice President for Academic and Public Partnerships in the Arts & Humanities,
Rutgers University.
The Feminist Art Project, administered
by the Rutgers Institute for Women and Art, is a collaborative national
initiative
celebrating
the Feminist Art Movement and the
aesthetic, intellectual and political impact of women on the visual
arts, art history, and art practice, past and present. The project
is a strategic intervention against the ongoing erasure of women
from the cultural record.
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