FRIDAY, March 29, 2024
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A woman’s place is in the gallery

A woman’s place is in the gallery

London’s Saatchi gallery opens landmark women-only show

For the first time in its 30-year history, London’s influential Saatchi Gallery is holding a female-only exhibition, showcasing 14 of the brightest stars in the art world.
Exhibits at the “Champagne Life” show include stuffed animals, giant portraits, abstract sculptures and a giant wall of saucepans. 
The show’s organisers say the works highlight the diversity among female art, and its value to art lovers of both genders.
“We’re not bringing them together as some kind of needy group. This really is about celebrating women’s contemporary art and being quite deliberate in saying these women don’t have anything in common,” says Saatchi Gallery chief executive Nigel Hurst.
The gallery has established a reputation for supporting female artists, helping launch the career of Tracey Emin, among others, and hopes the exhibition will contribute to redressing disparities within the industry.
“The art world has a glass ceiling. If you look at the number of people going to art college it pretty much splits 50/50. If you look at the top 50 auction lots in 2015, only three of them were by women artists,” Hurst points out.
Wider exposure would boost the price of female artwork, he adds, urging gallery bosses to modernise.
“The art industry is like every other industry, if you take a break from what you are doing, you are perceived as less focused, less professional, less serious than you should be,” he says.
“Even though it’s getting much better, a huge amount of work remains.”
The exhibition takes up two floors of the grand gallery in Chelsea, southwest London, and comprises works from all corners of the globe.
Standout exhibits include Anglo/Swedish artist Sigrid Holmwood’s paintings – which recall the Dutch peasant scenes of Pieter Bruegel and the lighting of Impressionist master Rembrandt – taken to psychedelic extremes with the use of fluorescent paint.
Another room is dominated by Serbian artist Jelena Bulajic’s hyperreal portraits of elderly women fashioned from marble dust, granite, limestone and graphite.
Next door, Saudi Arabia artist Maha Malluh’s wall of saucepans looks down on Iranian-born Soheila Sokhanvari’s stuffed horse, which straddles a Jeff Koons-style balloon sculpture.
French-born sculptor Virgile Ittah, whose wax sculpture of two mirrored figures laying on hospital beds is on display, says that female artists are now being taken more seriously.
“We are at a turning point in our society where the issue of gender is not so important any more, it’s important that it’s no longer important,” she says.
“I grew up with my dad alone, so the vision of a mother staying at home and taking care of her children and the kitchen has completely disappeared. 
“As artists we are a reflection of society,” she adds. “It’s not a male club any more.”
The show runs until March 6.
 
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