Ok here we are, there are five articles so we'll divide this up into five sections.
The Education of Women as Artists: Project Womanhouse
- since when does one need to be educated to be an artist, maybe I should read more.
- interesting how in Womanhouse, rather than becoming disillusioned with the formal idea of a woman's role in the house, the students embraced it as a common thought, and at the same time revolutionized it.
- So what started as a place of study and struggle turned into an art exhibit that signifies the triumphs and troubles of women. Literally a "Womanhouse".
The First Feminist Art Program: A View from the 1980s
- Again, I don't believe in ideology before art, the opposite seems to be more fitting for me.
- "We knew we had to take a hard look at who we were--and when we're in the society of men, we're generally prohibited from doing that. We're permitted to see ourselves as men want us to see ourselves but not as we really are." --kind of makes a lot of sense I suppose, I find it tragic how some women's lives are governed by the other sex's opinions.
- "I concluded that in the visual arts the necessary first step is to be able to see women's work as work by women." I don't agree with this, I believe that a woman artist should never strive to be a woman artist, but strive to be an artist that happens to be a woman, and be regarded on the same level as any other artist.
- The rest of the readings are all related to Womanhouse, the Feminist Art Program, and Judy Chicago; now I do understand that the entire feminist movement is an answer to the misogynist train of thought, but I again do not believe in women making art simply for the sake of showing that they are women through the art.
- Womanhouse and Ablutions are genius. Finally something that lets everyone know about the entire experience of being a woman, and mostly the things that one would not think about. The bathrooms, the bathtubs, they all speak out to anyone who listen, on a level that simply cannot be expressed by mere words.
In conclusion, while the minds behind these exhibits and programs are brilliant minds, I respectfully disagree with their general idea. I just like to think that I don't believe in gender, for anything. But these women are placing their gender in front of their artwork, which I ultimately cannot accept.

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