The Power with which We Leap Together. Women Artists in Spain and Portugal between Dictatorship and Democracy
This proposal aims to jointly explore the work of female artists in Spain and Portugal in the final years of the dictatorship and the beginnings of democracy.
The historical evolution of both countries in those years has many points in common. Both Spain and Portugal suffered long dictatorships, an authoritarian and repressive regime, marked by the veneration of the leader and a state organisation that resembled fascism, but with a traditionalist and Catholic component that distinguished them from others. In fact, both regimes would adopt the same motto to summarise their ideology: 鈥淕od, country and family鈥.
In the sixties and early seventies, the presence of female artists increased significantly in both countries, particularly in alternative circles and in opposition to the regime. When we examine the production of Spanish and Portuguese artists of the time, we see that they adopted a wide range of media and styles: abstraction and normative art, traditional realism, pop art and critical realism, conceptualism and neo-Dadaism, among others. Not all of them were concerned with reflecting on the female condition, but a significant number of the works produced by women in those years had to do, in one way or another, with themes close to the feminist agenda; such as the sexual division of labour, the social construct of societal roles, motherhood, domesticity or sexual violence. However, this feminist or proto-feminist aspect was ignored by most of the critics of the time (and even denied, on many occasions, by the artists themselves). It was not until a few years ago that some Spanish and Portuguese historians began to study the political dimension of many of these works.
This exhibit aims to reevaluate the work of Spanish and Portuguese artists at the time, taking into account their specificities with respect to the Anglo-Saxon model and highlighting the multiple parallels that we can find between them. It will also be an opportunity to investigate possible moments of exchange and encounter between artists from both countries.
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This proposal aims to jointly explore the work of female artists in Spain and Portugal in the final years of the dictatorship and the beginnings of democracy.
The historical evolution of both countries in those years has many points in common. Both Spain and Portugal suffered long dictatorships, an authoritarian and repressive regime, marked by the veneration of the leader and a state organisation that resembled fascism, but with a traditionalist and Catholic component that distinguished them from others. In fact, both regimes would adopt the same motto to summarise their ideology: 鈥淕od, country and family鈥.
In the sixties and early seventies, the presence of female artists increased significantly in both countries, particularly in alternative circles and in opposition to the regime. When we examine the production of Spanish and Portuguese artists of the time, we see that they adopted a wide range of media and styles: abstraction and normative art, traditional realism, pop art and critical realism, conceptualism and neo-Dadaism, among others. Not all of them were concerned with reflecting on the female condition, but a significant number of the works produced by women in those years had to do, in one way or another, with themes close to the feminist agenda; such as the sexual division of labour, the social construct of societal roles, motherhood, domesticity or sexual violence. However, this feminist or proto-feminist aspect was ignored by most of the critics of the time (and even denied, on many occasions, by the artists themselves). It was not until a few years ago that some Spanish and Portuguese historians began to study the political dimension of many of these works.
This exhibit aims to reevaluate the work of Spanish and Portuguese artists at the time, taking into account their specificities with respect to the Anglo-Saxon model and highlighting the multiple parallels that we can find between them. It will also be an opportunity to investigate possible moments of exchange and encounter between artists from both countries.
Artists on show
- Alice Jorge
- Ana Buenaventura
- Ana Hatherly
- Ana Peters
- Ana Vieira
- Ángela García Codoñer
- Àngels Ribé
- Aurelia Munoz
- Aurora Valero
- Bertina Lopes
- Cão Pestana
- Carme Aguadé i Cortés
- Clara Menéres
- Concha Jerez
- Elena Asins Rodríguez
- Elisabete Mileu
- Elisenda Sala
- Elvira Alfageme
- Emília Nadal
- Esther Ferrer
- Eugènia Balcells
- Eulália Grau
- Eva Lootz
- Fátima Vaz
- Fina Miralles
- Graca Morais
- Graça Pereira Coutinho
- Gracinda Candeias
- Helena Almeida
- Helena Lapas
- Helena Lumbreras
- Irene Buarque
- Isabel Baquedano
- Isabel Oliver Cuevas
- Jane Millares
- Joana Rosa
- Juana Francés
- Lola Bosshard
- Lourdes Castro
- Luisa Correia Pereira
- Magda Bolumar
- Manuela Almeida
- Maria Antónia Siza
- María Beatriz
- María Droc
- Maria José Aguiar
- Maria José Oliveira
- María Teresa Codina
- Marisa González
- Menez
- Paula Rego
- Renée Gagnon
- Salette Tavares
- Sílvia Gubern
- Soledad Sevilla
- Teresa Gancedo
- Teresa Magalhaes
- Túlia Saldanha