The Story of Art Without Men corrects nearly 600 years of male-focused art criticism
- Written by Edwina Preston, PhD Candidate, The University of Melbourne
Have you heard of Surrealist photographer Lee Miller[1]? Or the highly political Dada photo-montagist Hannah Höch[2]? 19th-century sculptor Edmonia Lewis[3] achieved fame and recognition in her lifetime, as did 20th-century sculptor Barbara Hepworth[4], but none of these women artists have achieved “household name” status, akin to Dali or Duchamp or Henry Moore. That is not, however, because they are not as important, pioneering, or ground-breaking.
Review: The Story of Art Without Men – Katy Hessel (Hutchinson Heinemann)
Katy Hessel’s ambition to plot, position, celebrate and chronologise women’s too-often-forgotten contributions to art is impressive and overdue. The Story of Art Without Men[5] is encyclopaedic in both breadth and intention.
A weighty remedy
I took it with me on a long haul flight and it used up most of my carry on allowance. Physically, it is a work of heft: a weighty remedy to six centuries of male-focused art criticism. That heft is a solid reminder that, though women’s contribution to art may have been consistently rendered invisible or placed at the margins, that in no way reflects the volume of their output.