ABSTRACT

In 1970, Judy Chicago and fifteen students founded the groundbreaking Feminist Art Program (FAP) at Fresno State. Drawing upon the consciousness-raising techniques of the women's liberation movement, they created shocking new art forms depicting female experiences. Collaborative work and performance art – including the famous "Cunt Cheerleaders" – were program hallmarks. Moving to Los Angeles, the FAP produced the first major feminist art installation, Womanhouse (1972).

Augmented by thirty-seven illustrations and color plates, this interdisciplinary collection of essays by artists and scholars, many of whom were eye witnesses to landmark events, relates how feminists produced vibrant bodies of art in Fresno and other locales where similar collaborations flourished. Articles on topics such as African American artists in New York and Los Angeles, San Francisco’s Las Mujeres Muralistas and Asian American Women Artists Association, and exhibitions in Taiwan and Italy showcase the artistic trajectories that destabilized traditional theories and practices and reshaped the art world.  An engaging editor’s introduction explains how feminist art emerged within the powerful women’s movement that transformed America. Entering the Picture is an exciting collection about the provocative contributions of feminists to American art.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter I|93 pages

Emerging: Views from the Periphery

chapter I 1|20 pages

Becoming Judy Chicago

Feminist Class

chapter I 2|19 pages

Collaboration and Conflict in the Fresno Feminist Art Program

An Experiment in Feminist Pedagogy

chapter I 4|9 pages

Interview with Suzanne Lacy

chapter I 5|14 pages

The First Feminist Art Program

A View from the 1980s

chapter I 6|15 pages

Feminist Art Education

Made in California

chapter II|110 pages

Re-Centering: Theory and Practice

chapter II 7|13 pages

Abundant Evidence

Black Women Artists of the 1960s and 1970s

chapter II 8|13 pages

“Teaching to Transgress”

Rita Yokoi and the Fresno Feminist Art Program

chapter II 9|13 pages

Joyce Aiken

Thirty Years of Feminist Art and Pedagogy in Fresno

chapter II 10|3 pages

“Your Vagina Smells Fine Now Naturally”

chapter II 11|10 pages

A Collective History

Las Mujeres Muralistas

chapter II 12|13 pages

The Women Artists' Cooperative Space as a Site for Social Change

Artemisia Gallery, Chicago (1973–1979)

chapter II 13|18 pages

Salon Women of the Second Wave

Honoring the Great Matrilineage of Creators of Culture

chapter III|100 pages

Picturing: Transformation

chapter III 16|12 pages

How I Became a Chicana Feminist Artist

chapter III 17|16 pages

Searching for Catalyst and Empowerment

The Asian American Women Artists Association, 1989–Present

chapter III 18|10 pages

Notes of a Dubious Daughter

My Unfinished Journey Toward Feminism

chapter III 19|16 pages

“The Way Things Are”

Curating Place as Feminist Practice in American Indian Women's Art

chapter III 22|15 pages

Feminist Activist Art Pedagogy

Unleashed and Engaged