30/30
Judy Rifka
Single Shape - 2, 1975
Handmade paint on plywood
121,9 × 121,9 × 5 cm
29/30
Judy Rifka
Ancestors Farewell, 1990
Linen on linen
45,7 × 45,7 cm
28/30
Judy Rifka
Five Step Painting, 2019
Acrylic on canvas
76,2 × 61 × 5,1 cm
27/30
Judy Rifka
Bottle Cap Dress, 1982
Oil on linen
119,4
× 189,2
× 12,5 cm
26/30
Judy Rifka
Art Pet, 1985
Oil on linen
76,2
× 61
× 5 cm
25/30
Judy Rifka
Grass Painting, 1982
Oil on linen with modelin paste
61
× 76,2 cm
24/30
Judy Rifka
On Acropolis, 1990
Linen on linen
45,7
× 45,7
× 5 cm
23/30
Judy Rifka
Modern Dance (Small), 1984
Oil on linen
45,7 × 45,7 cm
22/30
Kiki Smith
Alice I (Crossed legs), 2005
Porcelain
27,5
× 30,5
× 16 cm
Edition 5/13
21/30
Goshka Macuga
Unapparent Woods, 2020
Woven tapestry, screenprinted and foiled
60 × 102 × 2,3 cm
20/30
Goshka Macuga
Aby Warburg on Madness and Ritual, set for Scene 2, 2014
Tapestry
270 × 366 cm
Edition 2/5
19/30
Helene Appel
Sand, Steine, 2020
Oil, acrylic and watercolor on canvas
110
× 73 cm
18/30
Helene Appel
Putztuch, 2018
Acrylic and watercolor on jute
56,5
× 54,2 cm
17/30
Installation view
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
16/30
Candida Höfer
Corner I, 2014
Dye-Transfer Print
54
× 56,9 cm
Edition 6/9
15/30
Candida Höfer
Tables, 2016
Dye-Transfer Print
54
× 55,6 cm
Edition 6/9
14/30
Candida Höfer
Folds, 2016
Dye-Transfer Print
54
× 62,6 cm
Edition 6/9
13/30
Candida Höfer
Liverpool III 1968
Chromogenic print
51,1 × 41,1 cm
Edition 6/6
12/30
Leiko Ikemura
Hanako, 2020
Watercolor on paper
42
× 30 cm
11/30
Leiko Ikemura
Hanako, 2020
Watercolor on paper
42
× 30 cm
10/30
Leiko Ikemura
Hanako, 2020
Watercolor on paper
42
× 30 cm
9/30
Leiko Ikemura
Color in Black, 2020
Tempera and oil on jute
120
× 100 cm
8/30
Susan Weil
Walking Figure, 1968
Spray paint on plexiglas sheet in open metal frame
30,8
× 30,5
× 2,5 cm
7/30
Susan Weil
Crumpled Blueprint, 1995
Cyanotype
53,34 × 42,55 × 1,9 cm
6/30
Susan Weil
Drawn and Quartered, 1996
Cyanotype
55,88
× 55,88 cm
5/30
Marthe Wéry
Untitled, 1999-2005
Acrylic on dibond
39 × 30 cm
4/30
Marthe Wéry
Untitled, 2002
Acrylic on aluminium
170 × 150 cm
3/30
Marthe Wéry
Untitled, 1998
Acrylic on forex
153 × 150 cm
2/30
Leiko Ikemura
Memento Mori Earth, 2013/2019
Bronze patinated
28
× 135
× 40 cm
Edition 2/5
1/30
Installation view
Photo: Wilfried Petzi
The exhibition is based on the narrative of the well-known novel by Virginia Woolf, which became a standard read of the women's movement in the 1970s. As a young woman, Virginia Woolf was subjected to the conditions of Victorian society, which provided only a very very narrow sphere of activity and development for women. Even today, her novel is particularly relevant, opening up a universal discussion about the need for a space for creation, for stillness and, of course, for art. In our group exhibition, we present the work of a variety of outstanding women artists who approach their work in relation to science, history and literature,shaping the course of art history.
“Nevertheless, I believe that this poetess, who never wrote a word and was buried at a crossroad, is still alive. (...) She lives in you, in me and in many other women who are not here today. Yes, she lives. For true women poets do not die.” – Virginia Woolf. A Room of One's Own. 1929
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