German artist poses 1,250 Nazi garden gnomes Oct 15, 2009
Symposium reunites Judy Chicago students ... For the first time since 1970, a majority of the women in Judy Chicago's groundbreaking feminist art class will be together again. (Fresno Bee)
Symposium reunites Judy Chicago students Sep 13, 2009
I know for a fact there are female artists out there who are a little tired of the attention that has been lavished over the years on Judy Chicago, who in 1970 founded the nation's first feminist art program at California State University, Fresno ... For the first time since 1970, a majority of the women in Judy Chicago's groundbreaking feminist art class will be together again ... I posed questions to all the participating artists in the show via e-mail and offer selected answers here:... (Fresno Bee)
Fresno gallery co-founder pulls out of exhibit Sep 5, 2009
I know for a fact there are female artists out there who are a little tired of the attention that has been lavished over the years on Judy Chicago, who in 1970 founded the nation's first feminist art program at California State University, Fresno. It's as if mainstream culture needed one name it could latch onto and file under the category "pioneering feminist artist," and we all settled on Chicago, whose talent and passion -- not to mention brilliance in marketing her image -- catapulted her... (Fresno Bee)
Vincent Fecteau makes old new again at SFMOMA Sep 3, 2009
Some of it comes blatant, as in the barely abstracted pudenda of Judy Chicago's glazed ceramic "Georgia O'Keeffe Plate #1" (1979), from Chicago's notorious installation "The Dinner Party.". "I think a lot of people find the Judy Chicago really offensive," Fecteau said. (San Francisco Chronicle)
Fresno's Gallery 25 marks milestone with new show Sep 3, 2009
I know for a fact there are female artists out there who are a little tired of the attention that has been lavished over the years on Judy Chicago, who in 1970 founded the nation's first feminist art program at California State University, Fresno ... The noted artist Judy Chicago, who had a guest professorship at Fresno State in 1970-71, helped spark the movement when she formed a collaborative women's art class. (Fresno Bee)