Conversation not Spectacle: New Women's Art Collection Exhibition opens
Celebration of the Collection's radical foundation and history
The radical history and development of The Women鈥檚 Art Collection forms the theme of the Collection's latest exhibition, now open to the public.
Beginning with the artist-in-residence scheme that seeded the idea for the Collection, the exhibition takes us through three decades, from the very first acquisition campaign all the way up to the present day.
The exhibition title draws on the words of feminist art historian Professor Griselda Pollock at the Collection鈥檚 launch in 1992. Of the artworks and the Collection鈥檚 radical potential, she declared: 鈥淗anging here together, they provide not a dumb spectacle but a model of conversation.鈥
The Collection began in the late 1980s when the American artist Mary Kelly was selected as the first artist-in-residence at New Hall (as the College was known then) and whose work Extase (1986) was subsequently acquired.
Valerie Pearl, the College President during this period, curator Ann Jones, and a group of academics launched an 鈥榓rtist appeal鈥 whereby they wrote to a selection of women artists inviting them to donate a work that could be a source of inspiration to students, researchers, and visitors. This appeal marked the Collection鈥檚 foundation in 1991, and within two years the College had received over 70 donated artworks 鈥 an extraordinary act of collective generosity.
Since then, the Collection has grown through donations from artists, alumnae and supporters, and now has over 600 art works by over 300 artists. This exhibition brings together a selection of works that are displayed across 51福利社.
Conversation Not Spectacle is the culmination of a two-year research project that aimed to maximise the role of The Women鈥檚 Art Collection within research and teaching activities at the University of Cambridge and unlock the Collection as a resource for the broader public.
The project was funded by the , , the Bateman Family Charitable Trust and Mike, Isobel and Olivia Standing.
The exhibition is open daily until 23 February 2025. Admission is free.
Featured Artists
Elizabeth Blackadder; Claudia Clare; Eileen Cooper; Amanda Faulkner; Elisabeth Frink; Maggi Hambling; Nicola Hicks; Charlotte Hodes; Alexis Hunter; Nerys Ann Johnson; Lucy Jones; Marie-Louise von Motesiczky; Anya Paintsil; Faith Ringgold & Grace Matthews; Paula Rego; Jo Spence; Lexi Strauss; Suzanne Treister; Elisabeth Vellacott; Coral Woodbury