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After The Dinner Party

Judy Chicago became notorious for creating an openly sexual installation. Now she wants to focus on Jewish themes.

September 8, 2011 10:15
Rainbow Shabbat

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

5 min read

Judy Chicago might be forgiven for feeling frustrated. A pioneer of feminist art, her career has spanned five decades and she has produced a prodigious body of work, but she is nevertheless often seen as a one-hit wonder, best known for her 1979 work, The Dinner Party.

This installation presents a symbolic history of women in Western civilization through a series of 39 place settings laid out around a triangular table, each one focusing on a different woman from history or mythology. It was hugely divisive. It travelled to 16 venues in six countries with a viewing audience of over one million and Chicago was named by Newsweek as one of 10 artists who "rocked the ages", listed alongside Michelangelo, Manet and Marcel Duchamp. She was also named by the Union for Reform Judaism as one of eight Jewish women who changed the world. However, some took exception to the openly sexual nature of some of the imagery. Several venues cancelled the exhibition and there was even a debate in the United States Congress about its funding.

The 72-year-old Chicago was on a recent visit to the UK where she was promoting her new book about the artist Frida Kahlo. She was also planning an exhibition in London which will be the first time her work has been seen in this country since The Dinner Party was shown here in 1984. The exhibition, which is being organised with the Ben Uri Gallery, has a working title of Judy Chicago – More than the Dinner Party. So the question to ask her is, does she ever feel typecast.

"Absolutely," she laughs, "but I know that it is very common, particularly for women artists, for much of their work to be ignored. My work has not found its way into number of major museum's collections."