Women Art Revolution (2010) Poster

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10/10
Exceptional - don't miss it!
KarilDaniels9 September 2011
Don't miss this truly great documentary, a most amazing, totally unique and deeply inspirational film by Lynn Hershman Leeson (Teknolust, Strange Culture), which will stand alone as a history lesson in gender politics and how that plays out in the art world. It is playing NOW, for a short run at the Lumiere Theatre on California St. in San Francisco. Hershman Leeson has spent 40 years collecting legacy footage and pursuing interviews to make this rare gem, which reveals the unknown history of women's art and the ostracism of major female artists from mainstream acceptance by museums & major galleries, solely because of their gender. I loved it and would gladly see it multiple times!
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10/10
great
immovable_object8 October 2013
This is a wonderful film. It plunges you right into the middle of it all - it gives you a real feeling of the excitement of the women's revolution in the making. You can feel that it's made by a participant in the scene - and although the filmmaker never intrudes, she does make herself fabulously known after all.

The film includes lots of different artists, but it is organized along thematic lines, so you aren't just reviewing a cast of "characters" as in so many worthy but predictable documentaries. Instead you're engaging with a range of different issues that the artists attacked. Made with panache, humor, and smarts, it is an invaluable tribute to the times. The form fits the content, and the content is moving, stimulating, and inspiring, as a history and as an illumination of art-making and artists.
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4/10
Superficial talk
MikeyB179322 July 2015
Where are the paintings? Where are the sculptures?

It's about the talk. It's about feminism. It's about Civil Right's. It's about "The Movement". It's about politics. It's about the 60's.

It's all superficial. Short 30 second sound bytes from artists. Then on to another sound byte. Doesn't look at anything in any detail. Discusses briefly "The Dinner Party" with some congressional footage – then moves quickly on to another topic lest we become bored.

Avant Garde performance "art" is tossed in to entertain us – lest we become bored.

Nothing on Frieda Kahlo. Nothing on Kiki Smith. Nothing on Rosa Bonheur. Nothing on Camille Claudel. Nothing on Georgia O'Keefe. Nothing on Carole A. Feuerman. Nothing on Mary Pratt...

Kathe Kollwitz only gets a brief sound byte lest we become bored.

Does not mention the National Museum of Women in the Arts (founded in 1981).

Women artists are not just from the U.S.

Women artists didn't just start in the 1960's.
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5/10
A good or great story in a horrible documentary.
juliankennedy2318 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
!Women Art Revolution (2010): 5 out of 10. Well, we have seen this before. A good or great story in a horrible documentary. Let's start with the horrible. The documentary looks like something I would have seen in my art history class in college. I went to college in the late eighties. How a documentary can look this awful in 2010 in a bloody mystery. The Good: Women Art Revolution will introduce you to some artists you have never heard of that do great work. There is some visual punch and the movie finds its feet after it enters the eighties and younger, less Marxist, feminists take the stage. Not just are these younger artists more interested in talking about art than settling forty-year-old scores they also honestly produce much better work than their "pioneering" predecessors.

The movie also has a decent point underneath the chaos. The art world was a horrible closed shop. Since all art is subjective it is much easier to erect barriers in the art world than it would be in results based endeavors.

The Bad: Either Lynn Hershman Leeson has a personal grudge against Judy Chicago or Judy Chicago is one of the worst people in the world. Either way, Leeson picks footage that makes Judy seem like a horrible dictator that is definitely going to ask for the manager because you are out of stock of the blue one. Strange way to frame one of the founders of the modern feminist art movement and the creator of one of its most famous pieces "The Dinner Party" which to Chicago's credit is quite well done. There are plenty of times during the Women Art Revolution where a topic is broached upon and one thinks to oneself that would make a really good documentary. There is the possible murder of feminist artist Ana Mendieta by her husband minimalist sculptor Carl Andre. The documentary comes tantalizingly close to saying something interesting and then we fly off to another topic. Also, the Guerrilla Girls are surprisingly effective and humorous feminist artist protest group and would also have made a good documentary. Alas, they are on the screen for too brief of a time. Heck even following Judy Chicago around as she argues about coupons with the Kohl's cashier while spouting Maoist doctrine would have been great.

Instead, the film jumps around like a coked-up sugar glider worried if it stays on any topic or talking head for more than a minute we will lose interest. Plus there is a sense that we need to fit all of feminist art history of the past forty years in the allotted eighty-three minutes. A mile wide and an inch deep is the result.

The Ugly: For a documentary that talks about the hours of footage it was unable to use due to time constraints it is bizarre some of the things that are included. There is a lot of performance art in this film. A lot. It ranges from "wasn't that a Monty Python sketch to wasn't that a Yoko Ono piece. (Yoko is briefly included but she isn't highlighted because she was a famous female artist before 1970. No famous female artists before 1970 are included as if their mere presence will cause us to doubt the foundation of the film.) Anyway a little performance art goes a very long way and even the best pieces don't translate well to film and certainly don't age well.

There is a section in the film where Lynn Hershman-Leeson talks about how she lived her life ten years secretly as a woman. I mean she is already a woman but this woman was named Roberta and had blonde hair. She talks about how "Roberta" would seek out roommates who would be part of her "art piece" because they didn't realize that Roberta was not a real person despite the fact she had a drivers license and well was standing in front of them calling herself Roberta. It doesn't go anywhere, like well everything else in this film, but it is a surprisingly self-indulgent piece of narcissism to throw in the middle of a purported documentary about the feminist art movement. In Conclusion: For all, I know the minimalist modern art being produced by male artists in the late sixties was horrible. Women Art Revolution doesn't show any so I would have to guess. What I can say with more confidence is a lot of the pieces being made by female artists in the late sixties and early seventies was downright horrible. I mean embarrassed to have on your fridge horrible. It brings up the terrible feeling that at least in some of the cases these artists were kept out of museums and galleries for reasons other than gender.

Overall the documentary gives snippets of history you might never have known and there are some nice pieces and stories if you dig through the flotsam and self-serving backstabbing that clouds much of the film. I also look forward to the follow-up documentary where an enterprising person compares cold case missing person files to "Roberta's" movements. Just saying.
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