This panel explores feminist resistance as practiced by artists whose work and lives are documented in archival collections at the Getty Research Institute, examining how their creative, political, and bodily interventions challenged prevailing cultural narratives around gender, sexuality, power, and representation. Drawing on the papers of feminist artists, as well as digital and programmatic approaches to engaging feminist legacies, the panel demonstrates how resistance takes form—materially, performatively, and structurally—through art, writing, and institutional activism.
The first presentation, The Female Experience: Works by Faith Wilding and subRosa, explores the papers of an artist whose solo and collaborative projects focus on critiquing dominant perceptions of women’s health and social identities. Through performance, installation, activist interventions, writing, and pedagogy, Wilding and subRosa challenge societal views of women’s bodies and traditional roles. This feminist resistance is documented in an array of materials in Wilding’s archive—from cyberfeminist websites, workbooks, and videos to installations and solo performances reflecting on both mundane and distinctive female experiences.
The second presentation, Harmony Hammond and the Work of Making Space, examines the papers of a multidisciplinary feminist artist who mounted sustained resistance to the erasure of lesbian identity in the art world. Through interconnected strategies—including co-founding A.I.R. Gallery and the Heresies Collective, publishing Lesbian Art in America: A Contemporary History (2000), and maintaining her own creative practice—she challenged institutional exclusion on multiple fronts. Hammond’s archive reveals how her scholarly interventions, institutional activism, and artistic works operated as acts of resistance against systemic marginalization.
The third presentation, Resisting Erasure: Institutional Strategies to Support Feminist Art Historical Research, addresses institutional approaches that support feminist research, examining strategies that facilitate scholarly investigation into women’s artistic practices and resistances. As part of a larger research project that aims to examine the relationship between feminist performance art and its archives, this presentation will focus on the various ways that the research project has aimed to share resources pertaining to the holdings at our research institution. The speaker will primarily highlight the newly revised and expanded LibGuide on feminist archival resources, which was updated to bring attention to latent stories within our institutional collections and to take a feminist approach to historiography and the erasure of histories in the artistic canon. Throughout, the speaker will reveal the considerations underpinning decisions around accessibility within the shifting political landscape in the U.S.
The fourth presentation, Valentines for a Feminist Future, addresses programmatic initiatives that activate these feminist archives, with particular emphasis on networks of care and issues of bodily autonomy. Inspired by our collections of women artists’ archives, the speaker will describe events and partnerships that serve to illuminate the histories of feminist activism and resilience with the urgency of our contemporary moment.
Taken together, these presentations demonstrate how libraries and archives function as essential sites for preserving and activating feminist resistance practices. Through research, cataloging, and dissemination, the resistance strategies documented in these archives continue to contribute to the vital work of contemporary cultural workers.
Speakers TG
Public Programs Specialist, Getty Research Institute
SL
Special Collections Archivist, Getty Research Institute
MS
Digital Collection Development Librarian, Getty Research Institute
Special Collections Archivist, Getty Research Institute
Moderators
Librarian for Research Services, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
Research / Instruction Librarian, School of Visual Arts
Shea'la Finch (she/her) is the Research / Instruction Librarian at the School of Visual Arts, where she also teaches in the Humanities Department on the intersection of video games & culture. She is a co-moderator of the Intersectional Feminism & Art Special Interest Group.
Sponsors