!Women Art Revolution (DVD)
“PASSIONATE, CONTENTIOUS, FUNNY, SINCERE, POLITICALLY ATTUNED!
Ms. Hershman Leeson’s fighting spirit is contagious.”
—Rachel Saltz, The New York Times
THE DEFINITIVE FILM ON THE HISTORY OF FEMINIST ART!
An entertaining and revelatory “secret history” of Feminist Art, !Women Art Revolution deftly illuminates this under-explored movement through conversations, archival footage and works of visionary artists, historians, curators and critics. Starting from its roots in 1960s antiwar and civil rights protests, the film details developments in women’s art through the 1970s and explores how the tenacity and courage of these pioneering artists resulted in what is now widely regarded as the most significant art movement of the late 20th century.
For more than forty years, artist and filmmaker Lynn Hershman Leeson (Teknolust) has collected a plethora of interviews with her contemporaries-and shaped them into an intimate portrayal of their fight to break down barriers facing women both in the art world and society at large. With a rousing score by Carrie Brownstein (Sleater-Kinney, Portlandia), !WAR features Miranda July, The Guerrilla Girls, Yvonne Rainer, Judy Chicago, Marina Abramovic, Yoko Ono, B. Ruby Rich, Carolee Schneemann, Marcia Tucker and other groundbreaking figures.
- HD transfer, enhanced for widescreen viewing
- Additional interviews with Lynn Hershman Leeson, comic artist Spain Rodriguez and philanthropist Elizabeth A. Sackler
- Featurette on RAWWAR, the film’s interactive companion piece
- Theatrical trailers
- English subtitles for the deaf and hearing impaired
- Lynn Hershman Leeson - Director
Reviews
Stunning!
Could not be timelier!
Leeson's women are our own; their voices are essential.
Fiercely self-aware!
Whether you’re an art aficionado or not, you simply must see and experience this revolutionary and visionary film for yourself. !Women Art Revolution reclaims women’s narratives and manifests a vocal group of dissenters rattling the cages of constriction and conformity, refusing to be silenced.
These interviews form the backbone of !W.A.R., and like the film, they’re passionate, contentious, funny, sincere, politically attuned.... Ms. Hershman Leeson’s fighting spirit is contagious.
Fusing history with memoir, Lynn Hershman Leeson enlists multiple visual strategies to produce an elegantly layered visual and sonic web of politics and powerful emotion.
An astonishing chronicle of the dawn of the feminist art movement and a powerful, after-the-fact commentary on how obscured feminist art continues to be.
The most comprehensive documentary ever made on the feminist art movement.
A call to the next generation of female artists to keep forging ahead!
Lynn Hershman Leesonʼs upsetting, informative and cool documentary sets the stage for an important film about the womenʼs art scene which has never really received its due… I wasnʼt familiar with any of the information presented here and Iʼm now intrigued so I feel the film is a big success. Plus, the film works on an emotional level and I found myself shocked and angered by the unfair tactics of the male dominated art scene of both yesterday and today. I now know of some truly gifted and amazing female artists out in the world and thatʼs due to Lynn Hershman Leeson and !WOMEN ART REVOLUTION.
Lynn Hershman Leeson registered two standing ovations and counting at the festival for her new documentary on the history of the feminist art movement, !WOMEN ART REVOLUTION. Full disclosure: I’m in it, so I can’t really comment. Fuller disclosure: Women kept rushing up to me around Toronto and hugging me for my comments in the film. I’ve been in a lot of documentaries, but nothing like this has ever happened before. The film is shaping up to be a come-home-to-mama moment for a lot of women, both those who lived through the early days and those who didn’t. I think Hershman Leeson may have a hit on her hands.
Part social survey, but mostly celebration...helmer Lynn Hershman Leeson filmed her principal subjects over 40 years and distilled the footage into this entertaining docu. Hershman Leeson’s film is a valuable resource on a movement whose issues remain relevant. A provocateur du cinema, Hershman Leeson views docu conventions with the same contempt she does the line between fiction and nonfiction (see Strange Culture, which more or less defines the hybrid doc). Carrie Brownstein’s clever score manages to editorialize on all of it through mood, rhythm and the musical periods her work evokes.
This seminal documentary depicts the history of women artists who have used art as an activist practice to fight oppression and protest gender and racial exclusion—creating what many historians feel is the most significant art movement of the late-20th century.
After watching !Women Art Revolution, you’ll find yourself never forgetting these courageous and talented ladies.
!Women Art Revolution’s rarely seen footage and interviews uncover how the Feminist Movement transformed the art of our times.
Drawing from hundreds of hours of interviews with Leeson's contemporaries—artists, historians, curators and critics—the film presents a portrait of one of the most significant art movements of the late 20th century
Lynn Hershman Leeson’s !Women Art Revolution offers remarkable footage and covers an enormous swath of territory in revealing how the feminist art movement transformed the art and culture of our times. It’s great to have the spotlight shine on so many women artists that you might otherwise have forgotten existed, or never knew about to begin with
Bay Area avant-garde artist Lynn Hershman Leeson’s Women Art Revolution is an engaging look back at the women artists who declared WAR on the old-boy art establishment in the 60s, and a reminder of what feminism really looked like back in the day.
40-plus years in the making, the director traces one of the most overlooked, essential movements in contemporary art, critiquing, in a classic intersectional, feminist way, the power structures that traditionally determine what goes in the history book and galleries and who gets access to it....It was a thrill to see some grass roots, radical, confrontational feminist activism onscreen and in practice. For this, Hershman Leeson deserves major kudos. This is a film about equality in freedom of expression and in that respect the film is successful in actually getting the work out there for the world to see. 9 OUT OF 10.
For press and publicity inquiries, please email [email protected]. A selection of press materials for this title may be available for download here.