News | 2009
2024

2023

2022

2021

2020

2019

2018

2017

2016

2015

2014

2013

2012

2011

2010


2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2009-04-27 | REBELLE. Art and Feminism 1969-2009

Dineo Bopape The Thami Mnyele Foundation brings to your attention the exhibition "REBELLE. Art and Feminism 1969-2009".
We are proud to informe that will take part in the exhibition the former atists of Thami Mnyele:
- Dineo Bopape (born in Polokwane South Africa)
- Rehab El Sadek (born in Matrouh, Egypt)
- Sue Williamson (born in South Africa)
- Zanele Muholi (born in Umlazi, Durban) invited as guest artist by the Thami Mnyele Foundation for this summer (July-September).

This exhibition focuses on works by female artists who are or have been greatly inspired by feminism. While the topic of art and feminism has both champions and opponents, everyone is in agreement about one thing: feminism permanently changed the artistic landscape.

Curator:Mirjam Westen
Date:30 May to 23 August 2009
Location: Museum voor Moderne Kunst Arnhem (Museum of Modern Art Arnhem, the Netherlands


Recent exhibitions in MOCA, Los Angeles and the Brooklyn Museum in New York, amongst other institutions, reveal a renewed interest in art with a feminist slant. What does this theme mean for young female artists? And how did it inspire the work of earlier generations of female artists? The MMKA offers a major survey of works by a hundred female artists revealing similarities and differences between generations and cultures: from American pioneers like Faith Ringgold and Eastern and Western European pioneers like Ewa Partum, Nil Yalter, Karamustafa and Ulrike Rosenbach, to contemporary female artists from Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and the Netherlands. The exhibition rebelle reveals that feminist art is not about any single style or particular subject. Topics such as desire, the body, memory, masculinity, and social critique are explored. In addition, the exhibition focuses on female artists who stretch the concept of art in how they work � by collaborating with others, for example, or by using new media.
rebelle brings together work from different generations and parts of the world. The South African Berni Searle (1964) who often uses natural pigments and changes the color of her skin with them � recalling the spice trade and colonization � is, for example, influenced by Cuban American Ana Mendieta�s (1948-1985) �earth prints.� The Guatemalan Regina Galindo (1974) belongs to a generation of performance artists that use their bodies to question chaos and violence in their societies. Her work recalls that of Gina Pane.

Context
Newspaper clippings, documentaries and photos add another layer to rebelle. The art is placed in the context of important social developments, the changing position of women, and �action� and intervention in the art world in particular. From 1969 when the first meeting of Women Artists in Revolution (WAR) took place in America and in the Netherlands the activist group Dolle Mina was started, until 2009, the year of looking back. In rebelle viewers are offered the opportunity to look again at feminist art, freed from the cliches of pink overalls and easy dismissals ("damn anachronism") that have clouded its representation over the past decades. Here the way is opened to fresh interpretations of art and its global implications.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue.

Museum voor Moderne Kunst Arnhem, Utrechtseweg 87, Arnhem. Tel. +31 (0)26 3775300. www.mmkarnhem.nl Open: Tues. � Fri. 10 am to 5 pm, Sat. � Sun. 11 am to 6 pm. Free admission for children under 18.

Thami Mnyele Foundation promotes the exchange of art and culture between Africa and the Netherlands.