Box 2
Contains 192 Results:
These letters were addressed to the Head of the Art Department, with W.E.B. informing of their intent to organize and put pressure on schools to change their policies by means of social pressure, picketing, filing formal complaints, etc. The letters also suggest a 7 point program for rectifying discriminatory policies.
The draft of this "open letter to women art students," discusses sexism in art education and ca11s on students to join W.E.B. in organizing against discriminatory policies both within and outside of educational institutions.
Including a one page article by Joyce Weinstein, and a list of demands W.A.R. sent to the M.O.M.A., New York, in December 1969
This demonstration was held in front of the M.O.M.A. along with the presentation of a proposal to the city's six major museums for "a massive, simultaneous showing of women artists, to be called Women Choose Women.
This exhibition was the result of the W.I.A. demonstration in New York City, April 12, 1972.
This demonstration was held in front of the Brooklyn Museum to protest, the refusal of Michael Botwinick (the new museum director) to acknowledge the show promised to W.I.A. by the former museum director, Duncan Cameron.
The Women's Interart Center's Women Artists Historical Archive project.