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We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85 is an exhibition held at the Brooklyn Museum of Art from April 21, 2017, through September 17, 2017. The exhibition surveys the last twenty years of black female art and presents more than forty artists and activists who have decided to dedicate their work to the fight against racism, sexism, homophobia, and class injustice. It is not organized chronologically or by authorship, but thematically.

Black Lunch Table: We Wanted A Revolution Roundtable. Dindga McCannon explains her work and her archive at the Brooklyn Museum at the exhibition We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85 after a roundtable discussion with other black women artists at the Black Lunch Table event.
Black Lunch Table: We Wanted A Revolution Roundtable. Dindga McCannon explains her work and her archive at the Brooklyn Museum at the exhibition We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85 after a roundtable discussion with other black women artists at the Black Lunch Table event.
Black Lunch Table: We Wanted A Revolution Roundtable. Women visual artists of the African Diaspora meet at the Brooklyn Museum to discuss their work.
Black Lunch Table: We Wanted A Revolution Roundtable. Women visual artists of the African Diaspora meet at the Brooklyn Museum to discuss their work.

The structure of the exhibition


We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85 is organized by Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Senior Curator for the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, and Rujeko Hockley, former Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art, with Allie Rickard, Curatorial Assistant, Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum.[1] The exhibition is part of A Year of Yes: Reimagining Feminism at the Brooklyn Museum, a yearlong series of exhibitions celebrating the 10th anniversary of the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art. Leadership support is provided by Elizabeth A. Sackler, the Ford Foundation, the Stavros Niarchos Foundation, Anne Klein, the Calvin Klein Family Foundation, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, Mary Jo and Ted Shen, and an anonymous donor. Generous support is also provided by Annette Blum, the Taylor Foundation, the Antonia and Vladimir Kulaev Cultural Heritage Fund, Beth Dozoretz, The Cowles Charitable Trust, and Almine Rech Gallery.[1]

Within the varieties of media are conceptual art, performance, film, and video, printmaking, photography, and painting. Despite the huge differentiation between the mediums, the goal of vocalizing Black female artists and bringing up the notion of oppression of black female or non-binary artists in the art world and in culture unites the artworks of the exhibition. We Wanted a Revolution consists of nine sections, wherein each section refers to a specific theme or media.


Artists and movements



Spiral and The Black Arts Movement


Spiral is a group of Black artists that was active between 1963 and 1965. It was formed by Romare Bearden, Norman Lewis, Hale Woodruff and Charles Alston on July 5, 1963.


Emma Amos, born 1938

Emma Amos was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1938. She is an African American postmodernist painter and printmaker. Some of her works were exhibited including:


Elizabeth Catlett, 1915–2012

Elizabeth Catlett was a Mexican-American Modernist sculptor whose subject matter was often concentrated on black female experience. Elizabeth was born in Washington, D.C.


Jeff Donaldson, 1932–2004

Jeff Donaldson was an African-American visual artist of the Black Arts Movement.


Rudy Irwin (Baba Kachenga), d. 1969


Jae Jarrell, born 1935


Wadsworth A. Jarrell, born 1929


Lois Mailou Jones, 1905-1998


Lary Neal, 1937-1981


Faith Ringgold, born 1930


Jeanne Siegel, 1929-2013


Prints and Posters



Emma Amos, born 1938


Kay Brown, 1932-2012


Elizabeth Catlett, 1915–2012


Barbara Jones-Hogu, born 1938


Carolyn Lawrence, born 1940


Samella Lewis, born 1924


"Where We At" Black Women Artists



Kay Brown, 1932-2012


Carole Byard, 1941-2017


Pat Davis


Pat Minardi, born 1942


Dinga McCannon, born 1947


"Where We At" Black Women Artists Inc., founded 1971


Black Feminism


Some of the participants in the section were:


Art World Activism


Some of the participants in the section were:


Dialectics of Isolation



Heresies





The 1980s



Public programs


Symposium was held at the Brooklyn Museum of Art on April 21, 2017. As a part of the exhibition events, the acknowledged art historian Kellie Jones, author and feminist theory scholar Aruna D'Souza, and Black cultural studies academic Uri McMillan gave speeches and participated in a panel discussion.[2]


Reception and Criticism


The exhibition was covered by several magazines. The New York Times' main critique is that the selection of artists is rather one-sided and narrow, which is why many prominent black artists remained unrepresented.

The only change I would make, apart from adding more artists, would be to tweak its title: I’d edit it down to its opening phrase and put that in the present tense.. Holland Cotter (The New York Times)[3]

The New Yorker presented a short response for the exhibition:

The several dozen artists whose work is featured in this superlative survey did not conform to one style, but they did share urgent concerns, often addressing issues of bias and exclusion in their art—and in their art-world organizing. The Just Above Midtown Gallery (JAM), a crucial New York institution of the black avant-garde, was instrumental to the careers of a number of them, including Lorraine O’Grady, whose sardonic pageant gown made of countless white gloves—the artist wore it in guerrilla performances at gallery openings—is a wonder. There is much powerful photography on view, from Ming Smith’s spontaneous portraits of Harlemites in the seventies to Lorna Simpson and Carrie Mae Weems’s poignant pairings of image and text, from the eighties. But the ephemera—the fascinating documentation and spirited newsletters—provide the exhibition’s glue, presenting the women not as anomalous achievers but as part of a formidable movement. — The New Yorker[4]


Publications


Two books were published as a part of the scholarship program for the exhibition.


Black Radical Women, 1965–85: A Sourcebook


The book was first published in 2017 as an exhibition catalog. It contains thirty-eight reproductions of articles, poems, interviews, and other texts by or about the artists of the exhibition. The book provides the reader with the perspectives of black female art and Black culture in general that were most prioritized by the exhibition. The publication was intended for scholars or students of art history; however, it is accessible to a general reader.


We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85: New Perspectives



Sponsorship and funding


The exhibition was funded by the Ford Foundation, the Elizabeth A. Sackler Foundation, the Brooklyn Museum’s Contemporary Art Acquisitions Committee, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, and the Barbara Lee Family Foundation.


References


  1. "Brooklyn Museum". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2019-11-08.
  2. Symposium: We Wanted a Revolution - Interview - Faith Ringgold with Catherine Morris, retrieved 2019-11-12
  3. Cotter, Holland (2017-04-20). "To Be Black, Female and Fed Up With the Mainstream". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-11-12.
  4. "We Wanted A Revolution Black Radical Women 1965 85". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2019-11-12.



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