Artemisia Gallery

Coordinates: 41°53′40.6″N 87°39′13.3″W / 41.894611°N 87.653694°W / 41.894611; -87.653694
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Renamed user 35h9b24b933rhb (talk | contribs) at 02:02, 22 January 2020 (Fixed the Gallery's former address in infobox, based on Tribune article. (Apparently it was originally located at 9 W. Hubbard St.--I'll see if I can add that to the article in future.) Removed unneeded hidden text and spaces in headings. Added {{mdy}} tag. Moved |dissolved parameter onto separate line. Added wikilink to Illinois in lead. Moved comma in front of ref tag in History,p2,s1. Removed extraneous space before ref in Programs,p3,s2, and line break between {{reflist}} and categories.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Artemisia Gallery
Artemisia Gallery is located in Chicago metropolitan area
Artemisia Gallery
Location of Artemisia Gallery in Chicago
Artemisia Gallery is located in Illinois
Artemisia Gallery
Artemisia Gallery (Illinois)
Artemisia Gallery is located in the United States
Artemisia Gallery
Artemisia Gallery (the United States)
Established1973 (1973)
Dissolved2003 (2003)
Location700 N. Carpenter St.
Chicago, IL 60642[1]
Coordinates41°53′40.6″N 87°39′13.3″W / 41.894611°N 87.653694°W / 41.894611; -87.653694
TypeAlternative exhibition space

Artemisia Gallery was an alternative exhibition space in Chicago, Illinois, that operated from 1973 until its closure in 2003.

History

The gallery was a cooperative, started by 20 women who were frustrated by the lack of opportunities for female artists in Chicago, and opened in the same month as the ARC Gallery, another Chicago women’s cooperative. Artmesia was named after Artemisia Gentileschi, an Italian 17th-century artist and painter whose best work was first attributed to her father.

From 1973 to 2003,[1] Artemisia exhibited local, national, and international artists, supporting the careers of over 150 women artists and their mentees. The gallery was an active site for exhibitions, lectures, discussions, artist exchanges, and meetings.

In 1975, the gallery was home to the first meeting of what would later become the Chicago Artist Coalition.

The gallery closed in 2003. Lynne Warren, a curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art, suggested that women had become less drawn to a women's cooperative.[1]

Programs

As due-paying members of the cooperative, each member was granted a show annually in the gallery's exhibition space, and participated in monthly meetings to plan and execute the program.[2]

Members and applicants, guest artists, and educational programs were selected by the gallery's membership, which ranged from 10 to 20 members.

Artemisia Gallery created a video library of interviews from female artists and critics, and established a learning resource center which made information about the role of women in contemporary art available to the public through periodicals, slides, and videotapes. In addition, the gallery also provided a speaker's bureau which offered a mentorship program, and launched a public education pilot program to both promote the role of women in art, and to strengthen links between art and education.[3]

Notable Members

Founders: Barbara Grad, Phyllis MacDonald, Emily Pinkowski, Joy Poe, and Margaret (Harper) Wharton

First Members: Phyllis Bramson, Adrienne Drapkin, Shirley Federow, Sandra Gierke, Carole Harmel, Vera Klement, Linda Kramer, Susan Michod, Sandra Perlow, Claire Prussian, Nancy Redmond, Christine Rojek, Heidi Seidelhuber, Alice Shaddle, Mary Stoppert, and Carol Turchan

References

  1. ^ a b c Brotman, Barbara. "Pioneering gallery to end 30-year run". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved April 28, 2019.
  2. ^ Beier, Lucia Adams (1978). "Artemisia: A Women's Cooperative Gallery in Chicago". Leonardo. 11 (2): 115–117. ISSN 1530-9282.
  3. ^ "Artemisia | Art & Design in Chicago". WTTW Chicago. September 24, 2018. Retrieved February 15, 2019.