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Examples

  • Feminist artists, such as Judy Chicago, Nancy Spero and Mary Beth Edelson, tended in 1970s America to adopt a similarly dismissive stance to their Jewishness.

    Artists: Contemporary Anglo. 2009

  • The guests approaching the hangar had to navigate through knee-deep waves of fog spreading from a spectacular installation by the indomitable, one-and-only Judy Chicago.

    Edward Goldman: He Sold Us Sharks, Diamonds and Spots. Brooklyn Bridge Next? Edward Goldman 2012

  • She tells us just a little about their work: how Ed Moses busted the borders of the gallery format, how Ed Ruscha integrated words into his paintings, how Robert Irwin and James Turrell discovered light as their medium, and how Judy Chicago explored sexuality and gender in this macho atmosphere.

    Michael Roth: Review of Rebels in Paradise Michael Roth 2011

  • She tells us just a little about their work: how Ed Moses busted the borders of the gallery format, how Ed Ruscha integrated words into his paintings, how Robert Irwin and James Turrell discovered light as their medium, and how Judy Chicago explored sexuality and gender in this macho atmosphere.

    Michael Roth: Review of Rebels in Paradise Michael Roth 2011

  • She tells us just a little about their work: how Ed Moses busted the borders of the gallery format, how Ed Ruscha integrated words into his paintings, how Robert Irwin and James Turrell discovered light as their medium, and how Judy Chicago explored sexuality and gender in this macho atmosphere.

    Michael Roth: Review of Rebels in Paradise Michael Roth 2011

  • Made out of hundreds of large cubes of dry ice, lit at night to the maximum, dramatic effect one expects from Judy Chicago, this installation -- a recreation of a work she originally did in 1968 -- is called "Disappearing Environments."

    Edward Goldman: He Sold Us Sharks, Diamonds and Spots. Brooklyn Bridge Next? Edward Goldman 2012

  • The guests approaching the hangar had to navigate through knee-deep waves of fog spreading from a spectacular installation by the indomitable, one-and-only Judy Chicago.

    Edward Goldman: He Sold Us Sharks, Diamonds and Spots. Brooklyn Bridge Next? Edward Goldman 2012

  • Enacted under the supervision of groundbreaking feminist artists Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro, the site becomes the women's collective commentary on the life of the suburban housewife to "search out and reveal the female experience...the dreams and fantasies of women as they sewed, cooked, washed and ironed away their lives."

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • Made out of hundreds of large cubes of dry ice, lit at night to the maximum, dramatic effect one expects from Judy Chicago, this installation -- a recreation of a work she originally did in 1968 -- is called "Disappearing Environments."

    Edward Goldman: He Sold Us Sharks, Diamonds and Spots. Brooklyn Bridge Next? Edward Goldman 2012

  • Enacted under the supervision of groundbreaking feminist artists Judy Chicago and Miriam Shapiro, the site becomes the women's collective commentary on the life of the suburban housewife to "search out and reveal the female experience...the dreams and fantasies of women as they sewed, cooked, washed and ironed away their lives."

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

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