Then and Now: Judy Chicago’s Dinner Party

We interrupt Art History Radio for a brief at another mover and shaker in Feminism and the arts.  For as long as I have taken art history and other courses that leaned towards Feminism, I have read articles that dissected women’s roles in the public and private space.  I am not the first one to write this, but Judy Chicago’s The Dinner Party brings women (and their most intimate spaces) out in the open.

Go here to the Brooklyn Museum, home of the Dinner Party

2 comments

  1. I love the “Dinner Party.” I lived in Brooklyn for one summer, and I had so much fun seeing this work of art in-person. There are so many amazing and intricate details in all of the place settings. It’s such an impressive monument to women.

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