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Guerrilla Girls : secret identities.

Guerilla Girls (Group of artists)
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https://hdl.handle.net/2333.1/dz08ks43
Title
Guerrilla Girls : secret identities.
Author/Creator
Guerilla Girls (Group of artists)
Restrictions/Permissions
Copyright holder: Guerrilla Girls, Contact information: Franklin Furnace Archive, Incorporated, Pratt Institute, 200 Willoughby Avenue, ISC Building, Rooms 209-211, Brooklyn, NY 11205, U.S.A., +1-718-687-5800 (business), +1-718-687-5830 (fax), mail@franklinfurnace.org, http://www.franklinfurnace.org
Language
In English.
Date
1999
Filming or performance location
Performed at the Adirondack Mountains, New York, USA, in 1999.
Format
1 online resource (video file (7 min., 42 sec.)) : sound, color.
Credits
Performed by the Guerrilla Girls as the following women artists: Aphra Behn, Rosalind Franklin, Kathe Kollwitz, Audre Lorde, Claude Cahun, Tina Modotti, Ana Mendieta, Julia de Burgos, Gertrude Steinches.
Notes

In Secret Identities, the Guerrilla Girls discuss the exclusion of women artists, writers, and performers in art history. Concealed behind gorilla masks, the Guerrilla Girls take on the names of dead women artists - Claude Cahun, Julia de Burgos, Audre Lorde, and Ana Mendieta, among others - as a feminist gesture to counter the erasure of their work by cultural and artistic institutions. Furthermore, the video includes footage of Guerrilla Girls street actions targeting museums and galleries that fail to include women artists in their exhibitions and collections. Several women artists are listed at the end of Secret Identities as a political act to re-inscribe their names into art history, which has otherwise failed to include or recognize such contributions to art practice and discourse.

The Guerilla Girls are an anonymous women's collective that take on the names of dead women artists as pseudonyms for interventions. Concealed behind gorilla masks in action, the Guerilla Girls use various tactics to intervene in art, culture, and politics. Through the production of printed materials, publications, and performance actions, the Guerilla Girls expose political matters, convey information, and provoke discussions in public contexts. Notorious for exposing the exclusion of women artists, the Guerilla Girls have staged interventions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Venice Biennale, the Centre Pompidou, among other renowned venues. The Guerilla Girls work is presented from feminist and humorist perspectives. www.guerrillagirls.com.

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