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American women played remarkable and remarkably varied
roles in the fine and performing arts in the United States and abroad
throughout the twentieth century. Intimate Circles: American Women
in the Arts explores the lives of womenwriters, artists,
publishers, performers, collaborators, and community builderswhose
energies set in motion lasting aesthetic and cultural practices. The
women portrayed here lived primarily in the late-nineteenth through
the mid- twentieth centuries, an era identified with modernization,
urbanization, and mechanization. Theirs was a period of tremendous
social upheaval as well, when racial divisions lead to both increasingly
violent riots and increasingly vocal activism among African-American
communities and when a newly formed womens movement sought suffrage,
birth control, and economic independence for American women. The art
world also faced major changes as new modern and abstract art forms
emerged. Intimate Circle explores networks of women shaping
and defining the artistic movements of the period. Intimate Circles
examines the careers and lives not only of the most celebrated American
women, but also those of less familiar women. Because the range of
American womens contributions to the arts has been vast, Intimate
Circles celebrates the behind-the-scenes accomplishments of editors
and publishers, collectors, patrons, curators, critics, educators,
partners, biographers, and arts advocates along with those of artists,
writers, and performers. Though undervalued and sometimes out of sight,
womens work often drove their artistic and intellectual communities.
Because of the importance of place and community in the lives and
work of these women, the exhibition uses geography as an organizing
principle, highlighting how a common landscape united vastly different
artists in New York City and Harlem, Chicago, the American Southwest,
and Paris. These groups were somewhat fluid, and women in one circle
often had significant connections to those in another; the aesthetic
and social values of artistic communities were inevitably influenced
by these relationships and exchanges. In this way, circles defined
by intimacy, influence, or imaginative vision were not fixed, but
continually shifted throughout the century, creating new artistic
collaborations, allegiances, and rivalries.
The women represented in Intimate Circles, through their art,
lives, and legacies, have made possible the conditions of encounter
that are so essential to the growth and development of creative and
intellectual communities. Intimate Circles: American Women in the
Arts celebrates the vision, intellect, power, and talent of women
whose roles in shaping culture and the arts in their era and in our
own cannot be overstated as we begin to develop a richer and more
complete understanding of the artistic and cultural history of the
United States. |
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