Judy Chicago Through the Flower Art Space features changing art exhibitions, a video and book library, and a permanent exhibition about Judy Chicago’s life and work The opening was accompanied by a very special fireworks performance by Judy Chicago, "A Birthday Bouquet for Belen "
Gallery « Judy Chicago Artist Judy Chicago's official website Timeline About Judy Chicago Gallery Exhibitions and News Press Materials Videos Purchase Resources Representation
Biography - Judy Chicago For over five decades, Chicago has remained steadfast in her commitment to the power of art as a vehicle for intellectual transformation and social change and to women’s right to engage in the highest level of art production
Selected work « Judy Chicago Judy Chicago’s original concept for The Dinner Party was multi-faceted in that her goal was to introduce the richness of women’s heritage into the culture in three ways; a monumental work of art, a book and a film because she had discovered so much unknown information
Exhibitions and News - Judy Chicago Art Object – Judy Chicago’s “Herstory” Makes Space for Women Artists, Before and After After six decades in the art world, Judy Chicago is finally getting her due Her exhibition “Herstory,” currently on view at the New Museum, is the artist’s first comprehensive survey exhibition in New York
Selected work - Judy Chicago Judy Chicago first turned to pyrotechnics in the late 1960s in an effort to feminize the atmosphere at a time when the southern California art scene was almost entirely male dominated Between 1968 and 1974, Judy Chicago executed a series of increasingly complex fireworks pieces that involved site specific performances around California
Resources - Judy Chicago One of Judy Chicago’s primary goals was to overcome the erasure of women’s achievements that is symbolically expressed in The Dinner Party, her monumental history of women in Western Civilization, now permanently housed at the Elizabeth A Sackler Center for Feminist Art at the Brooklyn Museum
Selected work - Judy Chicago Judy Chicago collaborated with more than 150 needleworkers during the Birth Project to create dozens of images combining painting and needlework that celebrate various aspects of the birth process; from the painful to the mythical Sometimes witty and always original, this series celebrates the birth-giving capacity of women along with their