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Guerrilla
Girls Promote Art of Resistance in Memphis
For
release: Mar. 4, 2004
For press
information, contact Rebecca Terrell, (901) 678-2153
On
Friday, March 26 at 7:00 p.m. in UM's Rose Theater, The Guerrilla
Girls, infamous masked avengers of the art world, will make
their much anticipated Memphis debut. Fighting discrimination
in an organized and very public way since 1985, these Girls
have artfully combined humor, facts and fake fur to protest
everything from the lack of women artists in major museum
retrospectives to the Gulf War. Dressed in short skirts, high
heels and gorilla masks, the anonymous and controversial activists
will show slides, perform skits, and share stories of their
harrowing, hysterical and highly effective efforts to resist
discrimination and injustice.
Nineteen
years after they formed in response to a major show at New
York's Museum of Modern Art, in which only 13 of 169 artists
presented were female, they continue to cause a stir. Just
last month the College Art Association presented Girls with
the 2004 Frank Jewett Mather Award for their "unique
and evolving adaptation of art criticism as a vital, socially
relevant, and transformative art form." Feminist Gloria
Steinem says "their very anonymity makes clear that they
are fighting for women as a caste, but their message celebrates
each woman's uniqueness. By insisting on a world as if women
mattered, and also the joy of getting there, the Guerrilla
Girls pass the ultimate test: they make us both laugh and
fight; both happy and strong."
The
Guerrilla Girls appearance at the University of Memphis' Rose
Theater is the closing event of a yearlong series co-sponsored
by the Center for Research on Women, the Women's Studies Program
and the Women's Consciousness Raising Coalition entitled Women,
War and the Art of Resistance. Other series events included
a lecture by author Catherine Lutz on domestic violence in
the military, and a series of films on women and war by directors
from Iran, Lebanon, the United Kingdom and the United States.
"Maternalism,
feminism and other forms of gender-based solidarity are prominent
in anti-war activism all over the world," says Dr. Allison
Graham, Director of the Women's Studies Program. "We
organized this project because we believe it is critical for
our students to be thinking seriously about these issues at
such a crucial point in our history."
Women,
War and the Art of Resistance was funded in part by a
grant from the University of Memphis' Academic Enrichment
Funds and received significant support from the Student Activities
Council. Additional sponsors include Delta Axis, and Malco
Theatres, Inc.
The Guerrilla Girls appearance will be free and open to the
public. For more information contact Rebecca Terrell, Community
Relations Coordinator, Center for Research on Women at 678-2153,
or visit the Resource 25 "Event Calendar" at www.memphis.edu.
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