Heresies Collective
Heresies #1: a feminist publication on art and politics
New York City, USA: Heresies, 1977
Magazine / Periodical Soft cover
114 pp., 8.5x11", softcover
Edition size unknown
The premier issue of the feminist journal focusing on art and politics debuted in January 1977, featuring Tijuana Raid by Martha Rosler, Feminist Abstract Art by Harmony Hammond, Female Experience in Art by Ruth E Skin, A Pink Strip by Amy Sillman and the Pink Glass Swan by Lucy Lippard. Lippard wanted the journal be called Pink until artist Mary Miss proposed a quote popularized by Susan Sontag: “New truths begin as heresies.”
The first issue opens with a mission statement ("...we believe that what is commonly called art can have a political impact, and that in the making of art and all cultural artifacts our identities as women play a distinct role"), and closes with a selected bibliography on Feminism, Art and Politics.
Twenty-seven issues were produced over sixteen years, each with a single theme, style and perspective. Topics included feminist theory, art, politics, patterns of communication, lesbian art and artists, women's traditional arts and politics of aesthetics, violence against women, working women, women from peripheral nations, women and music, sex, film, activism, racism, postmodernism, and coming of age.
Artists whose works or writings were featured in the magazine include Laurie Anderson, Louise Bourgeois, Ana Mendieta, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Pat Stier, and many others.
Along with Lippard, initial members of the Heresies Collective included Joan Braderman, Elizabeth Hess, Ellen Lanyon, Arlene Ladden, Lucy R. Lippard, Marty Pottenger, Miriam Schapiro, May Stevens, and Mary Beth Edelson.
Edelson died this week at the age of 88. Read her Art News obituary, here:
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