Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award

Il Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Award è stato istituito sotto la presidenza di Lee Ann Miller (1978-80). Joan Mondale, artista e moglie del vicepresidente Walter Mondale, contribuì ad ottenere l'approvazione per un premio nazionale per onorare i risultati delle donne nelle arti e Jimmy Carter presiedette la prima cerimonia del Women's Caucus for Art nell'Ufficio ovale nel 1980.[1] La Cerimonia per il WCA Honor Awards è stata celebrata ogni anno da allora.[2]

Year Venue Recipients of WCA Honors Lifetime Achievement Award [3]
1979 Washington D. C. Isabel Bishop,[4] Selma Burke, Alice Neel, Louise Nevelson, Georgia O'Keeffe (in absentia)[5]
1980 New Orleans Anni Albers, Louise Bourgeois,[6] Caroline Durieux, Ida Kohlmeyer, Lee Krasner
1980 Alternate Awards Washington D. C. Bella Abzug, Sonia Johnson, Sister Theresa Kane, Rosa Parks, Gloria Steinem, Grace Paley
1981 San Francisco Ruth Bernhard, Adelyn Breeskin, Elizabeth Catlett, Sari Dienes, Claire Falkenstein, Helen Lundeberg
1982 New York City Bernice Abbott, Elsie Driggs, Elizabeth Gilmore Holt, Katharine Kuh, Charmion von Wiegand, Claire Zeisler[7]
1983 Filadelfia Edna Andrade, Dorothy Dehner,[8] Lotte Jacobi, Ellen Johnson, Stella Kramrisch, Lenore Tawney, Pecolia Warner[9]
1985 Los Angeles Minna Citron, Clyde Connell, Eleanor Raymond, Joyce Treiman, June Wayne, Rachel Wischnitzer[10]
1986 New York City Nell Blaine, Leonora Carrington, Sue Fuller, Lois Mailou Jones, Dorothy Miller, Barbara Morgan
1987 Boston Grace Hartigan, Agnes Mongan, Maud Morgan, Honoré Sharrer, Elizabeth Talford Scott, Beatrice Wood, Patricia Hills (President's Award)
1988 Houston Margaret Burroughs, Dorothy Hood, Miriam Schapiro,[11] Edith Standen, Jane Teller
1989 San Francisco Bernarda Bryson Shahn, Margret Craver, Clare Leighton, Betye Saar, Samella Sanders Lewis
1990 New York City Ilse Bing, Elizabeth Layton,[12] Helen Serger, May Stevens, Pablita Velarde
1991 Washington DC Theresa Bernstein,[13] Mildred Constantine, Otellie Loloma, Mine Okubo, Delilah Pierce
1992 Chicago Vera Berdich, Paula Gerard, Lucy Lewis, Louise Noun, Margaret Tafoya, Anna Tate
1993 Seattle Ruth Asawa, Shifra Goldman, Nancy Graves, Gwen Knight, Agueda Salazar Martinez, Emily Waheneka
1994 New York City Mary Adams, Maria Enriquez de Allen, Beverly Pepper, Faith Ringgold, Rachel Rosenthal, Charlotte Streifer Rubinstein
1995 San Antonio Irene Clark, Jacqueline Clipsham,[14] Alessandra Comini,[15] Jean Lacy, Amalia Mesa-Bains, Celia Álvarez Muñoz
1996 Boston Bernice Bing, Alicia Graig Faxon, Elsa Honig Fine, Howardena Pindell, Marianna Pineda, Kay WalkingStick
1997 Filadelfia Jo Hanson,[16] Sadie Krauss Kriebel, Jaune Quick-To-See Smith, Moira Roth, Kay Sekimachi, Tee Corinne (President's Award), Ofelia Garcia (President's Award)
1999 Los Angeles Judy Baca, Judy Chicago, Linda Frye Burnham, Evangeline J. Montgomery, Arlene Raven,[17] Barbara T. Smith
2001 Chicago Joyce Aiken, Marie Johnson Calloway, Dorothy Gillespie, Thalia Gouma-Peterson, Wilhelmina Cole Holladay, Ellen Lanyon,[18] Ruth G. Waddy
2002 Filadelfia Camille Billops, Judith K. Brodsky, Muriel Magenta, Linda Nochlin, Marilyn Stokstad, Barbara Wolanin (President's Award)
2003 New York City Eleanor Dickinson, Suzi Gablik, Grace Glueck, Ronne Hartfield, Eleanor Munro, Nancy Spero[19][20]
2004 Seattle Emma Amos, Jo Baer, Michi Itami, Helen Levitt, Yvonne Rainer, Elizabeth A. Sackler (President's Award), Tara Donovan (President's Award)[21]
2005 Atlanta Betty Blayton-Taylor, Rosalynn Carter, Mary D. Garrard, Agnes Martin,[22] Yōko Ono, Ann Sutherland Harris,[23] Andrea Barnwell (President's Award)
2006 Boston Eleanor Antin, Marisol Escobar, Elinor Gadon, Yayoi Kusama, Maura Reilly (President's Award)[24]
2007 Awards for Women in the Arts New York City Barbara Chase-Riboud, Wanda Corn, Buffie Johnson, Lucy R. Lippard, Elizabeth Murray, Connie Butler (President's Award)
2008 Dallas Ida Applebroog, Joanna Frueh, Nancy Grossman, Leslie King-Hammond, Yolanda López, Lowery Stokes Sims, Santa Barraza (President's Award), Joan Davidow (President's Award), Tey Marianna Nunn (President's Award)
2009 Los Angeles,[25][26] Maren Hassinger, Ester Hernandez, Joyce Kozloff, Margo Machida, Ruth Weisberg, Catherine Opie (President's Award), Susan Fisher Sterling (President's Award)
2010 Chicago Tritobia Hayes Benjamin, Mary Jane Jacob, Senga Nengudi, Joyce J. Scott, Spiderwoman Theater (Lisa Mayo, Gloria Miguel, Muriel Miguel), Juana Guzman (President's Award), Karen Reimer (President's Award)
2011 New York Beverly Buchanan, Diane Burko, Ofelia Garcia, Joan Marter, Carolee Schneemann, Sylvia Sleigh, Maria Torres (President's Award for Art & Activism)
2012 Los Angeles Whitney Chadwick, Suzanne Lacy, Ferris Olin, Bernice Steinbaum, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Karen Mary Davalos (President's Award for Art & Activism), Cathy Salser (President's Award for Art & Activism) Lynn Hershman Leeson (WCA Media Award)
2013 New York City Tina Dunkley, Artis Lane, Susana Torruella Leval, Joan Semmel, Leanne Stella (President's Award for Art & Activism)
2014 Chicago Phyllis Bramson, Harmony Hammond, Adrian Piper, Faith Wilding, Hye-Seong Tak Lee (President's Award for Art & Activism), Janice Nesser-Chu (President's Award for Art & Activism)
2015 New York Sue Coe, Kiki Smith, Martha Wilson, Petra Kuppers (President's Award for Art & Activism)
2016 Washington, DC Tommi Arai, Helène Aylon, Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, Stephanie Sherman (President's Award for Art & Activism)
2017 New York Audrey Flack, Mary Schmidt Campbell, Charlene Teters, Martha Rosler, (President's Award for Art and Activism) Kat Griefin
2018 Los Angeles Lee Bontecou, Lynn Hershman Leeson, Gloria Orenstein, Renee Stout, (President's Award for Art & Activism) Kathy Gallegos e Amelia Jones

Note modifica

  1. ^ Eleanor Dickinson, The History of the Women's Caucus for Art Archiviato il 13 marzo 2017 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  2. ^ Past WCA Lifetime Achievement Award Recipients, Women's Caucus for Art 40th Anniversary Celebration: 2012 Honor Awards Archiviato il 4 marzo 2016 in Internet Archive..
  3. ^ WCA Past Honorees, su nationalwca.org. URL consultato il 13 maggio 2018 (archiviato dall'url originale il 17 novembre 2013).
  4. ^ James T Edward, Janet Wilson James e Paul S. Boyer, Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, Volume 5, Harvard University Press, 1971, p. 64.
  5. ^ WCA Honor Awards 1979 (PDF), su nationalwca.org. URL consultato il 13 maggio 2018 (archiviato dall'url originale il 4 marzo 2016).
  6. ^ Della Gaze, Dictionary of Women's Artists, Volume 1, Taylor & Francis, 1997, p. 297.
  7. ^ WCA Honor Awards 1982[collegamento interrotto]. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  8. ^ Della Gaze, Dictionary of Women Artists, Volume 1, Taylor & Francis, 1997, p. 437.
  9. ^ WCA Honor Awards 1983 Archiviato il 4 marzo 2016 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  10. ^ WCA Honor Awards 1985 Archiviato il 12 ottobre 2013 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  11. ^ Holland Cotter, Miriam Schapiro, Brooklyn Museum, 6 agosto 2006.
  12. ^ Eric Hedegaard, Layton's Golden Age, in Mother Jones Magazine, vol. 15, n. 2, March 1990, p. 41.
  13. ^ Trish Hall, A Painter Wins a New Lease on Fame, in The New York Times, 17 febbraio 1991.
  14. ^ Teresa Barker, "Jacqueline Clipsham: I Had to Design My Own Studio, All My Equipment to Fit Me," Chicago Tribune (July 26, 1987).
  15. ^ International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004, Europa Publications, 2003, p. 111.
  16. ^ Nature, Culture, Public Space, su cla.purdue.edu, Purdue University. URL consultato il 5 maggio 2019 (archiviato dall'url originale il 29 settembre 2018).
  17. ^ Barbara Love, Feminists Who Changed America, 1963-1975, University of Illinois Press, 2006, p. 375.
  18. ^ Barbara Love, Feminists Who Changes America, 1963-1975, University of Illinois Press, 2006, p. 269.
  19. ^ WCA Honor Awards 2003 Archiviato il 12 ottobre 2013 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  20. ^ Nancy Spero, su art21.org, Art 21.
  21. ^ WCA Honor Awards 2004 Archiviato il 17 giugno 2016 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  22. ^ Holland Cottor, Agnes Martin, Abstract Painter, Dies at 92, in The New York Times, 17 dicembre 2004.
  23. ^ WCA Honor Awards 2005 Archiviato il 3 marzo 2016 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  24. ^ WCA Honor Awards 2006 Archiviato il 12 ottobre 2013 in Internet Archive.. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  25. ^ Christopher Howard, Women's Caucus for Art Lifetime Achievement Awards, su collegeart.org, College Art Association. URL consultato l'11 ottobre 2013.
  26. ^ Women's Caucus for Art Honors MICA Graduate Faculty Maren Hassinger, Joyce Kozloff for Lifetime Achievement, su mica.edu, Maryland Institute College of Art. URL consultato l'11 ottobre 2013 (archiviato dall'url originale il 13 ottobre 2013).

Collegamenti esterni modifica