Lecture

Join us in celebration and The Petticoat Painters, an organization of female artists

Yes, I want to attend!

SPAACES is honored to exhibit the Petticoat Painters, one of the longest continuously exhibiting women’s art groups in the nation. SPAACES has a goal of supporting women artists, with 70% of our programs reserved for women artists. This exhibit showcases the courage and persistence all women artists must have in pursuing their craft in today’s contemporary art world. Becoming and working as a woman artist remains a gendered issue. The social world of art can be under-stood as a gendered organization with multiple layers of intentional and unintentional inequality (Acker, 1990). Choosing art as a career is daunting, especially for those who are presented with limited choices to begin with (most often women and the working-class). For many women the art career is shoved amidst family duties, while for others it is put away and taken back out after they have finished raising their children or completed careers. The Petticoat Painters have successfully maintained their studio practice and exhibition records in the face of adversity, some of them, over a lifetime. By connecting others to a larger purpose, The Petticoat Painters inspire commitment, boost resolve, and help women artists find deeper meaning in their work and in the fulfillment of their art careers.

Despite their wealth of talent, the women in 1950’s Sarasota, were unable to find exhibition opportunities. When Marty Hartman was awarded first prize by the Sarasota Art Association, she did not receive the cash prize presented to her male predecessors, but a paper certificate instead. This slight was the impetus for her to establish a group of likeminded women artists determined to mount their own exhibitions. The initial group of seven women artists chose the name The Petticoat Painters to satirize the way women’s art was dismissed and have elected to keep the name for the struggle it implies. The National Museum for Women in the Arts reports only 13.7% of living artists represented by galleries in North America are women. The National Endowment for the Arts found that women artists aged 55–64 earn only 66¢ for each $1 earned by men. Members of the Petticoat Painters continue to bring these inequalities to the forefront and draw strength from each other as they address prevailing challenges. The group does not have a unified doctrine about art; rather each artist is encouraged to pursue her own unique path. Each generation of members evolves its own identity framed by contemporary thinking. We believe women’s voices united tell a unique and distinctive story.

The Petticoats group has had close to 60 invitational exhibitions. In 2008, they were featured at the Florida State Capitol building in Tallahassee. A documentary was made of the group in 2015 and showcased at the Sarasota Film Festival. The Petticoat’s work has been represented by important galleries and is included in numerous private and public collections as well as permanent museum installations. They have been invited to participate in residencies such as those of the National Parks Arts Foundation, Hermitage Artist Retreat and Vermont Studio Center and have participated in community outreach programs such as The Arts for Special People, Inc., a non-profit corporation using art with special populations. Members have received prestigious grants and awards including Art in Embassies Program of the United States Department of State and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and are featured in publications like New American Paintings, Studio Visit, and Artist’s Magazine, books and numerous newspaper articles and reviews.

May 16th 6:00pm – 8:00pm