Sherry Brody Explained

Sherry Brody
Birth Date:14 November 1932
Birth Place:Santa Monica, California
Known For:Womanhouse Project

Sherry Brody (–) was an American artist and pioneering member of the feminist art movement. Brody is known for her work on the Womanhouse project. Her sculpture, The Dollhouse, is in the Smithsonian Museum of American Art collection.

About

Sherry Brody was born on November 14, in Santa Monica, California.[1] She died January 30, 2015.

Education

Brody studied at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). She was a teaching assistant for Miriam Schapiro, who established the school's Feminist Arts Program in the early 1970s with artist Judy Chicago.[2] [3]

Career

In 1971 Brody was invited by Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro to participate in Womanhouse.[4] Brody collaborated with Schapiro to create The Dollhouse.[5] This included a room within Womanhouse and a sculptural object in the form of an actual dollhouse featuring belongings gathered from women around the world in six different rooms: a parlor, a kitchen, a Hollywood star’s bedroom, a “harem” room, a nursery, and, an artist’s studio.[6] Dollhouse was one of the works in Womanhouse, the installation and performance space organized by Shapiro and Chicago and sponsored by CalArts in 1972.

Brody appears in the 1974 documentary by Johanna Demeriakas, Womanhouse.

In her 2006 article, "Revisiting 'Womanhouse': Welcome to the (Deconstructed) 'Dollhouse'," Temma Balducci states, "The centerpiece of The Dollhouse room, and one of the key elements of Womanhouse, was Sherry Brody and Miriam Schapiro's The Dollhouse. The work subverts the traditional gender expectations perpetuated through a seemingly innocuous children's plaything. She continues, "The Dollhouse can be seen as symbolic of the whole, alluding to the use of play found throughout the project. . . The Dollhouse also suggests a possible source for the name Womanhouse." and "The Dollhouse, like Womanhouse, addresses the construction of gender." "Through parody and exaggeration, the size rooms in The Dollhouse critique the roles that white, middle-class women in mid-twentieth-century America were expected to perform and can be seen as a model for reading the entire Womanhouse project."[7]

In 2019 the Womanhouse project of which Brody made a significant contribution, was included in The 25 Works of Art That Define the Contemporary Age by the New York Times.[8]

The 2020 MOCA exhibition With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 included Brody and Schapiro's Dollhouse sculpture.[9] [10]

Significant works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sherry Brody Smithsonian American Art Museum . 2022-06-10 . americanart.si.edu . en-US.
  2. Web site: Sherry Brody Obituary (2015) Los Angeles Times . 2022-06-10 . Legacy.com.
  3. Skiles . Jacqueline . Morris . Diana . Lyle . Cindy . Schoenfeld . Ann . Poggi . Christine . Reitz . Rosetta . Rosenberg . Judy . Wilding . Faith . Hughes . Holly . Crippen . Gail M. . Garcia . Lorraine . 1980-06-01 . Looking Back: The Past Ten Years . Women Artists News . 6 . 2/3.
  4. Web site: Chicago . Judy . 1971 . Womanhouse Catalogue essay . 2022-06-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140611044304/http://www.suzyspence.com/womanhouse/Womanhousecatalogessay.pdf . 2014-06-11 .
  5. Web site: Almino . Elisa Wouk . 2020-01-22 . An Art Movement Unapologetic About Love and Pleasure . 2022-06-13 . Hyperallergic . en-US.
  6. Web site: Dollhouse Smithsonian American Art Museum . 2022-06-10 . americanart.si.edu . en-US.
  7. Balducci . Temma . 2006 . Revisiting "Womanhouse": Welcome to the (Deconstructed) "Dollhouse" . Woman's Art Journal . 27 . 2 . 17–23 . 20358086 . 0270-7993.
  8. News: 2019-07-15 . The 25 Works of Art That Define the Contemporary Age . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-06-13 . 0362-4331.
  9. Web site: With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 . 2022-06-14 . www.moca.org.
  10. Web site: Almino . Elisa Wouk . 2020-01-22 . An Art Movement Unapologetic About Love and Pleasure . 2022-06-14 . Hyperallergic . en-US.
  11. Web site: WomanHouse.net . 2022-06-13 . womanhouse.net.
  12. Schapiro . Miriam . Spring 1987 . Recalling Womanhouse . Women's Studies Quarterly . 15 . 1–2 . 25–30 . JSTOR.
  13. Schapiro . Miriam . Spring 1972 . The Education of Women as Artists: Project Womanhouse . Art Journal . 31 . 3 . 268–270 . 10.1080/00043249.1972.10793018 . JSTOR 775513.
  14. Lippard . Lippard . 1973 . Household Images in Art . Ms . 9 . March 1973 . 22.