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Women Without Men By Shirin Neshat

Decent Essays

Bathhouse, a public place which Shirin Neshat depicted in her film Women without Men, as well as a fantasy of imagination of orientalism, is the name of the exhibition which Veronica Bechtold, Rebecca Gross, Tia Harestad, Lisa O’Connor, Selena Skalisky have curated as their dream feminist exhibition. Inside the space of the Bathhouse, the works of seven artists from all over of the world are chosen as part of the exhibition. All of the art prieces articulate the multiplicity of identity through visual representation across medium, utilizing an array of subjects that ranges from pubic hair to female genitalia, which opens up a conversation on how each artist represent differences by visually engaging the audience. As the name suggests, The Bathhouse takes place in a traveling Roman bathhouse, which a vital part of the exhibition in terms of the arrangement and position of the artworks. “All feminists exploring their identity in culturally gendered spaces” are welcomed to this exhibition. The artists selected come from different ethnic, racial, and cultural backgrounds, as identity remains one of the central themes of the exhibition. Entering the exhibition, one is greeted by the infinite lights of Yayoi Kusama’s installation piece, Inifinity Mirror Room – the Souls of Millions of Light Years Away, as a way to engage the audience with a sense of connectedness. Alongside Yayoi Kusama are artworks by Carrie Mae Weems, Mona Hatoum, Hannah Wilke, Ana Mendieta, Cheryl Pope, and

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