YWAs: Young Woman Artists

YWAS: YOUNG WOMAN ARTISTS

ON VIEW JUNE 27–AUGUST 24, 2014

The name Young Woman Artists (YWAs) is inspired by another group of young artists, the Young British Artists (YBAs) who rose to prominence in the 1990s and were, like most co-ed art movements, a bit of a sausage fest.

By intentional contrast, Our YWAs exhibition was inspired by recent events in the art world and our American culture at large; women's health issues were inciting fierce debate in state houses and the white house, public opinion about the gender pay gap was flooding my news feed, and most specifically, I was troubled by a nagging sensation that whenever I saw art shows locally that the majority of work I encountered (especially in solo exhibitions) was made by cisgender male artists, and most of the outgoing artists submitting work to Wonder Fair were men. I looked inward and outward to consider how pernicious this trend might be on my own turf and in our local culture. In conversation with my friend and fellow feminist Art Historian Paula Rose, I learned that a similar tallying project was already underway in LA, and was spreading fast (and girl, was it awesome).

Like Gallery Tally artist Micol Hebron and the Guerrilla Girls before her, we feel it doesn't make much sense for successful artists to overwhelmingly be cisgender males; over time, we hope to not only address this gender gap issue by exhibiting more women artists, more thoughtfully in our own gallery, but we'll also look carefully at the recent history of other local galleries to determine if the KC metro area's creative gender gap is as wide as it appears to be elsewhere in America.

Our initial goal is modest; to mount an exhibition of exceptional woman artists whose talents dwarf their exposure in the local art scene. Eventually, however, we hope to publish the results of our KC/Lawrence gender gap survey along with related original essays both online and in print, in a catalog that will commemorate the first YWAs exhibition. Our online catalog, we hope, will become a resource for women artists and scholars of feminist art history interested in connecting, sharing influence, and increasing opportunities for all artists and arts organizers.

Justin Marable: Waste Not Mystics

On View April 25–June 22, 2014

Topeka-based printmaker Justin Marable presents Waste Not Mystics. This show is fantastic, both in content and execution: in a series of colorful screenprints, Marable tells the story of a mythic herd of unicorns reclaiming the Kansas prairie from an insidious oil magnate. Their revolutionary weapons of choice? Rainbows and stardust, of course. Waste Not Mystics is a classic Marable exhibition enhanced by a hint of Henry Darger's folkloric zeal.

Available Works: 

please inquire with gallery

Jonathan Metzger: Where I'm From, Where I Want To Be

On View March 28–April 22, 2014

Working in various media, Jonathan Metzger is a young, mid-western man searching for a place. Growing up on the bluffs near the Mississippi River in southern Minnesota, Metzger spent his youth on his parent’s farm. Memories of building fences, raising pole sheds, and completing household chores inspire his current work. Jonathan Metzger received his MFA with honors from University of Kansas in spring of 2013. Currently, Metzger is a visiting assistant professor at Millsaps College in Jackson, MS.

In his newest body of work, anthropomorphized hammers and tea cups borrowed from memories of his father’s work shed or his mother’s kitchen become monlithic portrait subjects.

See the photo archive of this exhibition

Available Works: 

please inquire with gallery