Judy Chicago

b. 1939
American painter and sculptor Judy Chicago (b. Cohen, later Gerowitz) is a pioneer of feminist art and art education. Known early in her career as a minimalist, she began to emphasize feminist content in her work in the late 1960s. She changed her last name to Chicago, the city of her birth. Beginning in the early 1970s, she was instrumental in establishing feminist art programs for women at California State University–Fresno and the California Institute of the Arts. Her collaborative work The Dinner Party: A Symbol of Our Heritage (1974–1979) is regarded as a foundational work of feminist art and is an example of the mixed media collaborative projects for which she is best known. In 2021, the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum in San Francisco mounted the first retrospective of her work.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Exhibition Announcement, Jack Glenn Gallery, Artforum, October 1970

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This ad for an exhibition at California State University Fullerton was intended as a manifesto. The artist Judy Gerowitz announced that she was divesting herself of “all names imposed upon her through…

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Banality of Evil/Struthof. From the series Holocaust Project: From Darkness to Light

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Chicago and her former husband Donald Woodman said that part of their motivation for their multimedia Holocaust Project was the realization of how cut off from their Jewish heritage and how detached…