Femme ’n isms, Part III: Feminine Faces and Intimate Spaces is presented in the Ripin Gallery at the Allen Memorial Art Museum from August 22, 2025 through July 12, 2026. As the concluding chapter of a multi-year series devoted to intersectional feminist artmaking, this installation draws from the museum’s collection to examine how women and femme-identifying artists shape representations of themselves and others. Inspired in part by a significant gift of works by Käthe Kollwitz and Lotte Jacobi, the exhibition foregrounds portraiture as a site of agency and self-definition.
Spanning more than a century, the works on view move between private interiors and public stages. Nearly half are self-portraits, where artists situate themselves within studios or domestic spaces, emphasizing labor, craft, and creative resolve. In these images, the workspace becomes an extension of identity. Other portraits capture intimate exchanges between friends or collaborators, moments in which subjects participate knowingly in their depiction. Even when musicians, actors, or public figures adopt personas, the act of posing carries intention rather than passivity.
The exhibition brings together a wide range of voices, including Emma Amos, Cecilia Beaux, Martine Gutierrez, Marie Laurencin, Joan Semmel, and
Cindy Sherman, among others. Though varied in medium and historical context, these artists share a sustained attention to how femininity is constructed, performed, and contested. Photography, painting, and printmaking intersect, revealing shifts in style while underscoring enduring concerns about visibility and control.
Organized by Sam Adams, the Ellen Johnson ’33 Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, the presentation affirms portraiture as a powerful instrument of self-assertion. Across generations, these subjects determine how they appear—at work, at rest, in character, or in contemplation—claiming authorship over their image and, by extension, their place within cultural history.
Image:
Lotte Jacobi (German, 1896–1990), Käthe Kollwitz, ca. 1930. Gelatin silver print. Gift of Adam Werner in memory of Gloria (OC 1962) and Newton Werner, 2022.49.3.