Women Artists Action Group Explained

Formation:1987
Language:English
Women Artists Action Group (W.A.A.G.)
Region Served:Ireland

Women Artists Action Group (W.A.A.G.) was an Irish feminist artists group founded with the goal of promoting the profile of women artists from Ireland, which was active from 1987 to 1991.

History

Women Artists Action Group was founded in 1987 by Pauline Cummins,[1] Breeda Mooney,[2] and Louise Walsh.[3] Cummins served as the group's first chair.[4] It had an equivalent organisation in Northern Ireland, N.I.W.A.A.G.[5] They were founded as a reaction to the perceived lack of representation of women artists in exhibitions in Ireland and to the 1987 "Irish Women Artists from the Eighteenth Century to the Present Day" exhibition and publication from the National Gallery of Ireland.[6]

W.A.A.G. had one exhibition at the Project Arts Centre in 1987, which featured over 90 women artists such as Anne Madden.[7] [8] The show featured over 100 slides of artwork, which later developed into a catalogued slide bank maintained by W.A.A.G. Their second exhibition was held at the Royal Hospital Kilmainham (later the Irish Museum of Modern Art) in 1988 which featured a number of student artists from the National College of Art and Design. The group set out to be well integrated into international women artists' networks, with the chair of W.A.A.G., Mooney elected to the executive of the International Association of Women in the Arts. Her election coincided with Dublin's year as the European City of Culture in 1991. As part of the celebrations, 11 women artists from across Europe created artworks across the River Liffey on the theme "Women Artists and the Environment", as well as Dublin hosting a visit from the Guerrilla Girls.[9] While the group was active, from 1987 to 1991, they also organised a number of conferences across Ireland.[10]

Committee Members

Notable members

Notes and References

  1. Book: Connolly . Maeve . Murphy . Paula . Art and Architecture of Ireland, Volume Three: Sculptors and Sculpture 1600-2000 . 2014 . Royal Irish Academy and Yale University Press . Dublin and New Haven . 9780300179217 . 531 . Time-based Art.
  2. Web site: Mooney, Breeda . National Irish Visual Arts Library . 25 May 2020.
  3. Book: Connolly . Linda . O'Toole . Tina . Documenting Irish feminisms : the second wave . 2005 . Woodfield . Dublin . 0953429350 . 116.
  4. Web site: Cummins, Pauline . National Irish Visual Arts Library . 25 May 2020.
  5. Web site: Dalton . Clare . Irish Women Artists 1870 -1970 Summer Loan Exhibition . adams.auctioneersvault.com . 25 May 2020 . 2014.
  6. Web site: Fowler . Joan . Speaking of Gender … Expressionism, feminism and sexuality . Art and Context . 25 May 2020.
  7. News: Erskine . Caroline . Louis Le Brocquy's Heads . 25 May 2020 . RTÉ Archives . 4 September 1987 . en.
  8. Walker . Dorothy . Looking Back . The GPA Irish Arts Review Yearbook . 1988 . 26–30 . 20492045 . 0791-038X.
  9. Robinson . Kate . Women's Contribution to the Visual Arts . Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review . 1992 . 81 . 321 . 49–56 . 30091650 . 0039-3495.
  10. Web site: 06. Artists as Parents . Visual Artists Ireland . 25 May 2020 . 1 April 2014.