30 years of punking art world sexism

30 years of punking art world sexism

Guerilla Girls

– Artist’s Website –
It is 30 years since the Guerrilla Girls – a shifting collective of activists committed to exposing inequality in the art world – came into being, during which time a lot has changed, and a lot hasn’t. As they point out in their latest campaign, galleries that once showed only 10% women artists now show up to 20%. New York museums that, in 1985, gave no women artists a solo exhibition – including the Guggenheim, the Metropolitan and the Whitney – each gave a single woman a solo show last year.

“The Whitney museum says, ‘Isn’t it wonderful – we have 30% women in the new collection!’” says the activist known as Frida Kahlo. “And we’re saying, why is that something to be happy about – 30%? Where is the other 20?”

One thing that has categorically changed in the last three decades is that it has become harder to find good gorilla masks. We are in an art space on New York’s Lower East Side, where the three women sitting opposite me could be smiling, but who knows? Each is wearing a disguise she won’t take off for the entirety of the interview. (I brought doughnuts to the meeting, which none of the women can eat without removing their masks and revealing their identities. Such are the sacrifices they make for their art.) I don’t know their names, either. Each chose her pseudonym to celebrate a woman artist of the past – as well as Kahlo, there’s Käthe Kollwitz, named after a 19th-century German artist, and Zubeida Agha, for a modern Pakistani artist who died in 1997 – and the only way to distinguish them is by their voices and variations in the design of the masks. Kahlo’s is plastered in glittery pink lipstick and has more luxuriant hair than the other two, and behind the eyeholes of Käthe Kollwitz’s mask, I can just about make out blue-framed spectacles.

“They wear out,” says Kahlo.

“But there’s so few choices,” says Agha.

“It used to be better,” says Kollwitz and sighs. “I guess it’s not a big Halloween thing any more.”

Kollwitz and Kahlo are both original members of the group, which has, over the years, numbered around 60 members. They were initially going to wear ski masks while pointing out something that, in 1985, no one else was making much of: the huge discrepancy in the numbers of men and women artists shown by the major museums and galleries. “I mean, we didn’t have a plan,” says Kahlo. “We were just pissed off.” The monkey masks came about after a spelling mix-up around guerrilla/gorilla, and so the avant-garde protest was born, a satirical gesture that was also a way for the women to protect themselves and their careers from reprisals. (“The art world was a small clubby place, and we thought our careers would be hurt,” says Kollwitz.)

Over time, the stickers and posters used by the Guerrilla Girls in their campaigns have themselves became desirable artifacts. Tate Modern has the group’s artwork as part of its permanent collection. They have shown their protest materials at the Venice Biennale. The most famous of the posters, from 1989, is that of a female nude overlaid with a gorilla mask and the slogan “Do women have to be naked to get into the Met Museum?”, protesting the fact that while 5% of the artists shown there were women, 85% of the nudes were.

“Galleries ask to represent us,” says Agha. “But we’re not interested in being part of the market and producing a precious commodity. You can buy our posters online for $20.”
Advertisement

The fact that the women have become a familiar spectacle in the art world does little to undermine the absurdity of meeting them: an emperor’s clothes-type scenario in which everyone in the room contrives not to notice that three of our number are dressed as gorillas that is also, oddly, quite intimidating. Without names, faces, ages or biography, it is hard for trolls to target the Guerrilla Girls. One could email abuse to their website, but the kind of sexual threats that feminist campaigners routinely come in for on social media is somehow deflated when the addressees look like impassive gorillas.

In the runup to the group’s 30th anniversary retrospective, the Guerrilla Girls have a new target, the billionaire art collectors who drive the art market and often sit on the boards of the major museums, giving them a say in what art gets bought and shown.

“If you think about it, that’s kind of a conflict of interest,” says Kahlo.

“We accept that art is outrageously expensive, and that all these hugely wealthy people are the ones buying,” says Kollwitz. “What we don’t understand is that they are also controlling the institutions.”

The aim of the new campaign, which will take the form, as usual, of stickers plastered all over posh New York neighbourhoods, is designed to highlight “overemphasis on money as the criterion for success in the art world,” says Kahlo. “Whenever you read about artists, a lot of the coverage has to do with how rich they are, how much their work sells for, which wealthy people in the world have them. No one is looking at the system and saying: is this the way culture is produced?”

The group’s fundamental mission is still to expose sexism and racism in the art world and, while the language might have changed over the years (“Become more coded,” says Kahlo), the underlying discrimination hasn’t. A gallery owner once said to Kollwitz, “women and artists of colour are just not making work that addresses the dialogue”, by which she understood them to mean, “I can’t make billions of dollars from women artists. So I’ll pick up this young white guy.”

And while museums and galleries have changed the makeup of their exhibitors slightly, “it’s a certain kind of tokenism,” says Kahlo, “where once institutions realised they had a problem with diversity, they would show one woman artist and one artist of colour, and think that was taken care of. So it was pretty interesting to convince people that was not a solution, that was just a continuation.”

Share This

Leave a Reply