#WOMENSART
@womensart1
Celebrating ♀'s art & creativity, curated by author & art historian @PL_Henderson1 Images © to respective owners https://t.co/ZuWYHgsBxF
@womensart1
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https://womensartblog.wordpress.com/ 18-01-2016 10:32:28
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Iranian artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian's sculptural work incorporates traditional reverse glass painting, mirror mosaics and principles of Islamic Geometry #WomensArt
Women Waiting for the Moon to Rise, 1944 by Uemura Shoen, an important artist in Meiji, Taishō and early Shōwa period Japanese painting #WomensArt
#WomensArt blog:
Painter Shani Rhys James – States of Mind
womensartblog.wordpress.com/2024/04/24/sha…
'If I can't dance I don't want to be in your revolution,' - Emma Goldman
Illustration by Brazilian illustrator Camila Pinheiro, from Anna Russell's book 'So Here I Am' (2019) #womensart
Artist Clare Leighton created illustrations for Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights book in 1931. They are said to have inspired set designer for the 1939 film version of the novel starring Laurence Olivier #WomensArt
Kenyan artist Thandiwe Muriu’s 'Camo series', photographic portraits cloaking models in patterned fabric #WomensArt
'Art is the only place you can do what you like. That's freedom' -
Portuguese artist Paula Rego #womensart
Mona Caron, contemporary Swiss-born artist, known for her large scale murals connecting to environmental concerns and activism #WomensArt
UK textile artist, Fiona Gill, creates scenes reflecting vibrant colours, flora and fauna #WomensArt
Janis Goodman, contemporary printmaker based in the UK, who creates work featuring city and countryside #WomensArt
During wartime, women used knitting as part of the resistance and for spying, encoding messages with combinations of knits and purls. This included Phyllis Latour Doyle, who parachuted into occupied Normandy in 1944 #womensart