An innovative arts project that celebrates women with disabilities, educating viewers to redefine perceptions and beauty, unleashing potential for all.
An on-going collection of stories from survivors of rape and abuse. Written, stitched, and painted onto red fabric, our stories are displayed in city and town centers to create and demand public space to heal.
A mobile trading library and interactive biblio installation that features a collection of 850 books written by Black women. The library uses books to build community, and explore intersections of race, class, culture and gender while creating space…
An international collaborative initiative at Rutgers celebrating the Feminist Art Movement and the aesthetic, intellectual and political impact of women on the visual arts,art history and art practice, past and present.
Artist Tatyana Fazlalizadeh, a native of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She is the creator of Stop Telling Women to Smile, an international street art series that tackles gender based street harassment.
Founded in 1996, Studio XX is a bilingual feminist artist-run centre that supports technological experimentation, creation and critical reflection in media arts.
Stop Telling Women to Smile is an art series by Tatyana Fazlalizadeh. The work attempts to address gender based street harassment by placing drawn portraits of women, composed with captions that speak directly to offenders, outside in public spaces.
Stacy Bias is an activist, educator and entrepreneur who founded TechnoDyke.com as well as FatGirl Speaks, BelliesAreBeautiful.com and the Fat Experience Project.
Featuring women who possess one of the most distinctive outward signs of aging--silvering hair. Photographs and interviews explore many women's ideas and feelings about growing older in this society.
A print magazine of queer feminist sex art and literature. It aims to meld pornography with high art; comics with erotica; titillation with stunning visuals.