l101 S. Locust, Ste. B-07
From February 14 through March 21, 2026, PDNB Gallery presents
Texas Women Artists: 1946 – 2025, a sweeping exhibition honoring nearly eight decades of creative production by women working across the Lone Star State. Expanding on the gallery’s earlier survey of regional art, this focused presentation brings together photography, painting, and works on paper, underscoring the breadth and continuity of artistic voices that have shaped Texas’ cultural landscape since the postwar years.
The exhibition bridges generations, from modernist pioneer Carlotta Corpron to contemporary innovators such as Dornith Doherty and Delilah Montoya. Corpron, long associated with Texas Woman’s University and counted among the so-called “Forgotten Nine,” brought abstraction into photographic practice with luminous experiments in light and form; her archive now resides at the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Doherty’s sustained engagement with global seed banks translates scientific research into ethereal images, including her study of Acacia pycnantha, the national flower of Australia, rendered as a delicate constellation against white ground. Montoya’s collotype print
El Aborto in Homage to Frida Kahlo resonates with histories of resistance and identity, echoing the enduring symbolism of Frida Kahlo while affirming Chicana perspectives.
New work by Marcy Palmer debuts from her
Seeds of Strength & Resilience series, employing nineteenth-century print processes and botanical chemistry to elevate medicinal plants with gold leaf. Meanwhile, Elaine Pawlowicz offers surreal inflections of suburban life, and Carroll Swenson-Roberts revisits pastoral storytelling with layered, almost medieval exuberance.
By assembling figures such as Joan Winter, Debora Hunter, Loli Kantor, Jeanine Michna-Bales, and others alongside emerging and mid-career artists,
Texas Women Artists: 1946 – 2025 affirms a lineage grounded in craft, experimentation, and regional commitment. The result is not merely a survey, but a testament to endurance and reinvention—proof that Texas’ artistic narrative has long been written, in large measure, by women.
Image:
Marcy Palmer, Cloud of Relief, 2025 © Marcy Palmer