Audra Lambert discusses the artists featured in “Look Both Ways: 50 Years at the New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art” and other installations during her talk, “Women Artists’ Networks and Collective Action, from the 1970s to Today,” at the Working Men’s Institute Sunday, Oct. 12.
The curator of the New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art, Audra Lambert, gave a presentation called “Women Artists’ Networks and Collective Action, from the 1970s to Today” at the Working Men’s Institute Sunday, Oct. 12.
She described how different installations across the country incorporated feminist ideals during the 1970s and into the modern day. The four main installations she discussed are the A.I.R. Gallery in New York City, the Artemisia Gallery in Chicago, the Los Angeles Women’s Building and W.I.G. in New Harmony. Lambert also mentions multiple artists who were featured in both these installations and the current one at the New Harmony Gallery of Contemporary Art.
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