Judy Chicago's "The Dinner Party" acquired by the Brooklyn Museum

April 18, 2002

Artist Judy Chicago.

Photographer: Donald Woodman 2004; Institution: Judy Chicago

Artist Judy Chicago is best known for her monumental mixed-media sculpture, The Dinner Party, which was first exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 1979. A symbolic history of women in Western civilization, the piece comprises an enormous triangular table with thirty-nine place settings commemorating women such as the female pharaoh Hatshepsut, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Sojourner Truth, and Virginia Woolf. The table stands on a tile floor marked with the names of an additional 999 women. A landmark in feminist art, The Dinner Party was controversial for its use of sexual female imagery. Since 1979, the piece has been seen by more than one million people in a variety of venues. On April 18, 2002, The Dinner Party was acquired by the Brooklyn Museum for its permanent collection. The permanent installation opened on March 23, 2007 as the centerpiece of the new Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art.

The Dinner Party remains a powerful reminder of the transformative power of inviting the legacy and heritage of women's achievements into one's life and consciousness. Boston's Fenway Community Health Center, for instance, sponsors an annual fundraiser inspired initially by Chicago's work. The fifteenth installment of "The Women's Dinner Party" gathered more than 1,100 women in support of the health center's outreach to HIV-positive clients and to the LGBT community in April 2006. Another indication of the continuing evocative power of this work is in the way that some schools have used the dinner party concept as an educational tool. The Blue Oak School in Napa, California, for instance, presented "The Dinner Party Art Exhibit" in May 2005. Blue Oak School's students from kindergarten through the sixth grade honored historic women by creating ceramic plates and place settings representing women from the fields of cooking, writing, inventing, athletics, and art, and of general achievement in the United States and around the world.

A descendant of 23 generations of rabbis, including the eighteenth-century Lithuanian rabbi the Gaon of Vilna, Chicago was educated at the Art Institute of Chicago and at UCLA, where she earned a master's degree in 1964. Her work has always explored questions of gender and power. Significantly, many of Chicago's creations have involved the collaborative work of dozens, even hundreds, of women volunteers. Her first major exhibit, Womanhouse (1972), was a joint creation of the members of the Fresno Feminist Art Program, which Chicago created at California State University in 1970.

The Birth Project (1980-1985) grew out of Chicago's realization that the birthing process was rarely a subject of Western art. For this piece, Chicago designed images of women in labor, which were then translated into needlework by women around the U.S. Needlework is also the medium for Chicago's Resolutions: A Stitch in Time (1994-2000), which reinterprets traditional proverbs. Other mixed-media projects, combining paint, photography, and bronze relief, include Powerplay and The Holocaust Project: From Darkness into Light (1985-1993).

Chicago has also taught courses at Indiana University, Duke University, the University of North Carolina, and Pitzer College in California. Currently, Chicago offers classes through her non-profit Through the Flower foundation, based in New Mexico.

Sources: www.judychicago.com; www.brooklynmuseum.com; Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, pp. 217-219; Amelia Jones, Sexual Politics: Judy Chicago's Dinner Party in Feminist Art History (Berkeley, 1996); Edward Lucie-Smith, Judy Chicago: An American Vision (New York, 2000); Gail Levin, Becoming Judy Chicago, A Biography of the Artist (New York, 2007); Letter from Adriana Guitierrez to the Jewish Women's Archive, March 7, 2005; Boston Spirit Magazine, April/May 2006; Judy Chicago, The Dinner Party: From Creation to Preservation (New York, 2007).

5 Comments

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

I saw "The Dinner Party" at the Brooklyn Museum of Art when it was shown, the first time, in the late 1970s. I went with another artist, who was very uncomfortable with the subject matter as visualized. I was impressed by the show. A great idea carried out by many artists.

The process of remembering the Dinner Party prompted me to write to Ms Chicago. Her assistant pointed out that although the Museum chose not to display them, there were panels the artist made, paying tribute to the many people who encouraged and helped realize her vision. http://www.brooklynmuseum.org/...

In reply to by Harriet Jerush…

Many thanks for that link.

This monumental work was envisioned by Chicago but produced by many artists and artisans, ceramicists, fabric artists, et al, whose names definitely get lost in the shuffle. At the time this work was produced, I was one of hundreds of women around the country working in creative women's collectives. (involved with arts, media, healthcare, bakeries, restaurants, galleries, herstory projects, childcare, schools, potteries, literature, graphics collectives...)

I was disappointed by Judy Chicago's branding this ambitious, collaborative work with her name at a time when so many of us were working anonymously and collectively. I had hoped it was a collective that produced this break-through installation. It certainly was a large group effort; but only one name involved was publicized; only one name is remembered. Of course you could say that about Michelangelo and about so many academics who erase the contributions of their students and collaborators to achieve fame and fortune. Is that the model we want to follow? Is that what feminism was and is about?

If her aim was to make her name with this project, Judy Chicago certainly succeeded. Of course, she also helped to spread the fame of hundreds of women the Dinner Party celebrated; but how many viewers know or remember that there were women's collectives from coast to coast in the seventies, many of them researching and producing important work in the fields of the arts, health and education?

In reply to by Harriet Jerush…

I think you'll find that Judy Chicago is aware of and has promoted many women's work over the years in many venues. One good example is the recent documentary, "Women Art Revolution" (http://womenartrevolution.com/... by Lynn Hershman Leeson that includes a lot of footage with Chicago about the work she was doing, especially in the '70s and '80s and including "Dinner Party." Hershman also has site for uploads of new art: RAWWAR.org

There is also a new documentary being developed here in Boston around the occupation/creation of the Women's Building on Memorial Drive. And, of course, JWA would like to help where it can. Those collectives do need to be remembered (and in many cases, we need them again).

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Judy Chicago's "The Dinner Party" acquired by the Brooklyn Museum." (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/thisweek/apr/18/2002/judy-chicago>.