TOGETHER, AGAIN Women’S Collaborative Art + Community
TOGETHER, AGAIN Women’s Collaborative Art + Community BY CAREY LOVELACE We are developing the ability to work collectively and politically rather than privately and personally. From these will be built the values of the new society. —Roxanne Dunbar 1 “Female Liberation as the Basis for Social Liberation,” 1970 Cheri Gaulke (Feminist Art Workers member) has developed a theory of performance: “One plus one equals three.” —KMC Minns 2 “Moving Out Part Two: The Artists Speak,” 1979 3 “All for one and one for all” was the cheer of the Little Rascals (including token female Darla). Our Gang movies, with their ragtag children-heroes, were filmed during the Depression. This was an age of the collective spirit, fostering the idea that common folk banding together could defeat powerful interests. (Après moi, Walmart!) Front Range, Front Range Women Artists, Boulder , CO, 1984 (Jerry R. West, Model). Photo courtesy of Meridel Rubinstein. The artists and groups in Making It Together: Women’s Collaborative Art and Community come from the 1970s, another era believing in communal potential. This exhibition covers a period stretching 4 roughly from 1969 through 1985, and those featured here engaged in social action—inspiringly, 1 In Robin Morgan, Sisterhood Is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women’s Liberation Movement (New York: Vintage Books, 1970), 492. 2 “Moving Out Part Two: The Artists Speak,” Spinning Off, May 1979. 3 Echoing the Three Muskateers. 4 As points of historical reference: NOW was formed in 1966, the first radical Women’s Liberation groups emerged in 1967. The 1970s saw a range of breakthroughs: In 1971, the Supreme Court decision Roe v.
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