Feminism, Pedagogy and the Studio: Reflections Across Four Decades

Feminism, Pedagogy and the Studio: Reflections Across Four Decades

Feminism, Pedagogy and the Studio: Reflections Across Four Decades

Feminism, Pedagogy and the Studio: Reflections Across Four Decades

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Overview

Two lectures that address feminist questions and art education in the 1980s and today.

Feminism, Pedagogy and the Studio: Reflections Across Four Decades brings together two lectures delivered by feminist art historian and curator Griselda Pollock in 1985 and 2022.

In 1985, Griselda Pollock critically examined the gender politics of twentieth-century art education that, she argued, reinforced masculinist and individualist ideologies within capitalist conditions of artistic production. She linked the cult of authorship to the nonrecognition of women as artists, even in the face of the evidence of women’s considerable participation in modern art. She explored the impact of a critical post-modern and feminist artistic engagement with theories of meaning, subjectivity, and the image drawn from outside the "studio" model. She ultimately proposed "feminist interventions in art’s histories," where expanded histories—including race, class, gender, and sexuality—challenge both the monographic-all-male model of the hero artist and the hegemony of formalist art theory.

Almost forty years later, in 2022, she revisited the impact of "1968" and its theoretical revolution, historically situating the major geopolitical and ideological shifts after 1989 or 2001, but notably 2007 (the iphone, linking to the internet and social media). She identifies a troubling cultural tendency post-2010 (with thanks to Derrida) she names “insta-grammatology” and calls for critical analysis of how the "grammar" of social media reduce the spectrum of nuanced thinking and perform political surveillance of ideas. She documents her feminist pedagogical project: a Master’s and PhD programme in “Feminist Studies in the Visual Arts” drawing on the emancipatory politics of Paulo Freire, Augusto Boal, bell hooks, Audre Lorde, and Jacques Rancière. She also turns to Hannah Arendt’s model for intergenerational communication (in a shared, radically changing world) that values both historical self-understanding and the critical necessity for an expanded, conceptually-richer language.

Copublished by Villa Arson

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781915609663
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 04/01/2025
Series: Scratching the Surface , #1
Pages: 120
Product dimensions: 4.25(w) x 6.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Griselda Pollock is a feminist art historian and curator. Now Professor emerita of Social and Critical Histories of Art at the University of Leeds, she also created and directed the transdisciplinary Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History (2001–). She is the 2020 Laureate of the Holberg Prize and in 2023 received the CAA Life-time Achievement Award for Writing on Art. Recent publications include Mary Cassatt (2022), Killing Men & Dying Women: Imagining Difference in 1950s New York Painting (2022), WOMAN IN ART: Helen Rosenau’s "Little Book" of 1944 (2023) and Medium & Memory (2023).

Sophie Orlando is a researcher and an author living in Paris. She is associate professor of art history at The Villa Arson. Previous books include British Black Art: Debates on the Western Art History (2016) and Conceptualism: Intersectional Readings, International Framings (2019).
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