The Women Artists Shows.Salons.Societies project was launched in 2017 as a collaboration between Artl@s and AWARE. Combining AWARE’s ambitions to restore the presence of 20th-century women artists in the history of art, and Artl@s’s desire to provide scholars with the data and tools necessary to question the canonical art historical narratives through quantitative and cartographic analyses, we decided to work on group exhibitions of women artists.
Our first ambition is to build a community of scholars and work together to develop a common terminology and even possibly a common and consistent methodology to study these events, because the ones used in the field of exhibition history are inadequate.None of these exhibitions “made art history” or can be thought as “exemplary,”and the discursive silence that surrounds them require art historians to come-up with new questions, new research strategies, and new discourses.
Through the programs we organized and will organize, and through the tools and resources we are making available to the public, including this issue of the Artl@s Bulletin, we also want to contribute to a global history of all-women exhibitions from the 1870s to the 1970s.
TÉLÉCHARGER ET LIRE L’INTRODUCTION EN INTÉGRALITÉ SUR LE SITE DE L’ARTL@S BULLETIN.
La Société des femmes artistes a été créée à Rome chez la peintre Ida Salvagnini Bidoli et son mari Francesco Alberto Salvagnini. Ses membres se sont constitués en groupe à l’occasion de l’Exposition nationale des beaux-arts lors de l’Exposition internationale du Simplon, à Milan, en 1906, où elles sont parvenues à avoir leur propre salle. Cet article décrit les difficultés rencontrées par ces artistes, montre l’importance de l’exposition en tant que lieu où les ambitions artistiques ont coïncidé avec le mouvement des femmes, et contextualise la Société des femmes artistes au sein des plus importantes transformations relatives au rôle des femmes en Italie au début du XXe siècle.
Chiara Iorino holds an MA in Art History (Bologna University) and an MA in Arts Policy and Management (Birkbeck University) and was a visiting scholar at the Center for Gender Studies (ZtG) at Humboldt University. She is a PhD student at IMT-School for Advanced Studies in Lucca focusing on visual culture and women’s movements in 20th-century Italy.