Tawny Chatmon: Sanctuaries of Truth, Dissolution of Lies, the Annapolis-based artist’s first solo show in D.C. offers a corrective to a history of racist imagery.
A new exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts spotlights 40 women who found fame in the Low Countries between 1600 and 1750, including Koerten, Judith Leyster and Clara Peeters.
Remedying years of oversight, the National Museum of Women in the Arts is trying to make female painters from the Low Country household names in America.
Louise Bourgeois, Sheida Soleimani and Gillian Wearing are among the 30 female artists contributing to a show that is challenging, unsettling and sometimes downright uncomfortable.
The 15th Annual Slow Art Day – with 210+ museums, galleries, churches, and hospitals are – begins tomorrow Saturday, April 5, 2025 (see full list of venues around the world).
As Republicans and the Trump administration target DEI initiatives and queer and trans communities, vocal leaders at a few institutions are standing firm.
The current exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts isn’t the first to examine the uncanny, but it is the first to do so from the perspective of women.
The selection of exhibitions and other events featured in the CAA Committee on Women in the Arts Spring Picks emphasize capacious connections that both well-known artists and their lesser.