course

AH401

Course Credit:  3

Largely obscured from the history of “feminist” art, Latin American artists such as Ana Mendieta, Yolanda Andrade, Sylvia Palacios Whitman, Marisol, and Marie Orensanz, among many others, were crucial to the development of contemporary art in the twentieth century. Active in Latin America and the United States during a key period in this dual-continental history, many of these artists may not have considered themselves feminists per se, but their work can be interpreted in relation to feminist art theory. This course examines selected issues,movements, and artists of global importance from the 1960s to the mid-1980s. We will explore ways in which themes such as repression parallel those of liberation and how women, whose experiences were shaped by violence, censorship, and exile, developed an aesthetic that addressed body politics, marginalization, and repressive regimes. What can we learn from women whose legacies continue to be relevant today? Through text, video, and images exploring these histories, students will produce written responses and formulate a final research project based on one of the organizing themes of this class.

Related programs: Liberal Arts