Kloosterboer on Painting Today / Pintando Hoy at the MEAM

On International Women’s Day, observed on March 8th 2019, the European Museum of Modern Art—better known as the MEAM — inaugurated the exhibition Painting Today / Pintando Hoy curated by PoetsArtists publisher Didi Menendez.

Entrance Hall of the MEAM, the European Museum of Modern Art in Barcelona, Spain

Entrance Hall of the MEAM, the European Museum of Modern Art in Barcelona, Spain

Painting Today shows over 70 artworks by female artists of many different ethnic origins, hailing from north, south, and central America, Oceania, and Europe. Some are emerging artists, others have reached the pinnacle of their careers. Nineteen of us were lucky enough to have the time and means to travel to Barcelona to go to the well-attended opening ceremony at this beautiful and important museum, founded by its director, José Manuel Infiesta—a true gentleman, an indefatigable visionary, a lover of strong figurative art.

Left: Paintings by Anne-Christine Roda -  Michèle et Michel  (left) and  Anwen  (right)  Right: Tanya Atanasova’s painting entitled  Smokey Eyes / Joëlle

Left: Paintings by Anne-Christine Roda – Michèle et Michel (left) and Anwen (right)

Right: Tanya Atanasova’s painting entitled Smokey Eyes / Joëlle

It isn’t easy to launch a museum in Europe. As opposed to American standards where virtually anyone with a spare room can set up a museum, here in Europe the rules and regulations are quite strenuous and complicated. Moreover, the MEAM is the only museum in Europe that shows contemporary figurative art exclusively, so to exhibit work here is an extraordinary privilege.

MEAM Director José Manuel Infiesta and Natalie Holland next to her painting  Mamma’s House

MEAM Director José Manuel Infiesta and Natalie Holland next to her painting Mamma’s House

This is not the first time the MEAM holds a women-only exhibition. Last year, in celebration of the 2018 International Women’s Day, the exhibition Mujeres Artistas Hoy presented contemporary figurative artwork by outstanding Spanish female artists. Infiesta is a pioneer who champions figurative skill-based art in a world where the myopic marketing of abstract and modernistic art by governing tastemakers and art speculators still exerts much influence. Infiesta actively supports figurative artists—young and old, all genders, from all countries and cultures. Many of us dream of showing at the MEAM and hope our work will one day join its permanent collection.

Attending Artists from left to right:  Nadine Robbins, Lorna May Wadsworth, Carmen Chami, Kim Peters, Francien Krieg, Melinda Borysevicz, Natalie Holland, Kelly Birkenruth, Megan Read, Tanya Atanasova, Lisa Keay, Lorena Kloosterboer, Teresa Brutcher, Sara Scribner, Arina Gordienko, Aleksandra Kalisz, Viktoria Savenkova

Attending Artists from left to right:

Nadine Robbins, Lorna May Wadsworth, Carmen Chami, Kim Peters, Francien Krieg, Melinda Borysevicz, Natalie Holland, Kelly Birkenruth, Megan Read, Tanya Atanasova, Lisa Keay, Lorena Kloosterboer, Teresa Brutcher, Sara Scribner, Arina Gordienko, Aleksandra Kalisz, Viktoria Savenkova

Despite Painting Today being a women-only exhibition, its title is not indicative of gender. This serves to highlight female artists’ struggles to break glass ceilings in an artworld in which male artists still get a disproportionally large ratio of available opportunities. Having a non-gender-based title sets the stage for a future in which gender isn’t part of the classification, value, or status of the artist any longer.

Left: Lorna May Wadsworth next to her painting  The Muse   Righ: Melinda Borysevicz next to her paintings  That was then  (left) and  A Gift for Ariadne  (right)

Left: Lorna May Wadsworth next to her painting The Muse

Righ: Melinda Borysevicz next to her paintings That was then (left) and A Gift for Ariadne (right)

There’s not only a great chasm in opportunities to exhibit and sell for female artists, but increasingly there’s a backlash coming from mostly white, often older males who cannot understand what the fuss is about. Some even ask why women-only exhibitions are held at all, as if this has not been the norm for men for centuries. These critics are seemingly completely oblivious that today’s ratio in group exhibitions is far from close to equal. I see that as a grave lack of empathy and understanding. Sadly, for many who are accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.

Paintings by Aleksandra Kalisz,  Beginning  (left) and  Change  (right)

Paintings by Aleksandra Kalisz, Beginning (left) and Change (right)

Get the Facts about Gender Disparity in the Arts – National Museum of Women in the Arts

Get the Facts about Gender Disparity in the Arts – National Museum of Women in the Arts

Mind you, I’m not arguing in favor of gender balance as a rule where exactly 50% needs to be female. No! But just give us an opportunity to show that our work is competitive—if need be by removing artists’ names from juries and curators—so that we can compete on an equal footing. If you’re still thinking women exaggerate about inequality in the arts, get the facts HERE.

This inequity that the majority of women artists experience must be even worse in countries where society hasn’t reached the slow-growing awareness of the western world yet. When artists get together, we talk about our isolation, the pervasive misogyny, the ageism, the patronizing mind games that often hurt so badly that creativity is crushed, and the juggling of creative work with household obligations. How many of the nineteen women who attended the exhibition opening of Painting Today do you suppose went back home without an urgent to-do list, having ample time to reminisce at leisure about this grand opening that placed us on a red carpet, under bright spotlights?

Sara Scribner on the red carpet with husband artist Shane Scribner and their daughter

Sara Scribner on the red carpet with husband artist Shane Scribner and their daughter

We certainly need more visionaries like José Manual Infiesta, who gives us the opportunity to exhibit in such a magnificent and distinguished museum—he appreciates artists and it shows. His devoted team of young dedicated assistants made us feel welcome, efficiently tending to our needs with ready smiles and encouraging can-do attitudes brimming with positive energy. A delightful contrast to the stuffy self-important attitude we so often find at other art institutions.

Left: Painting on the right entitled  Frejya and her Moon Cold Auguries  by Pamela Wilson, painting on the left entitled  Band of Moonlight  by Francien Krieg  Right: Kelly Birkenruth next to one of the display banners of  Painting Today  featuring her painting  Guarding the Heart  which also graces the cover of the catalog

Left: Painting on the right entitled Frejya and her Moon Cold Auguries by Pamela Wilson, painting on the left entitled Band of Moonlight by Francien Krieg

Right: Kelly Birkenruth next to one of the display banners of Painting Today featuring her painting Guarding the Heart which also graces the cover of the catalog

The opening night was glorious! The director, museum staff, the press, and throng of attendees made all of us feel special—from the red-carpet photoshoot in the grand entrance hall, the photographers, and the beautiful banners, to the striking display of our paintings, the warm inclusion of all attending artists, and the copious flowing cava.

Lorena Kloosterboer giving the opening speech on behalf of Didi Menendez, the curator of  Painting Today/ Pintando Hoy

Lorena Kloosterboer giving the opening speech on behalf of Didi Menendez, the curator of Painting Today/ Pintando Hoy

The curator, Didi Menendez, was unable to attend the opening so she asked me to speak on her behalf which was a great honor for me. See my opening speech HERE!

Thanks to the PR organized by the museum, the press coverage in local and national newspapers, radio, and television was impressive. See more paintings, photos, and lots of press articles HERE!

Arina Gordienko next to her painting  The Smile

Arina Gordienko next to her painting The Smile

Social media flooded with images of the event and many of the attending artists described this event as a highlight in their career. Teresa Brutcher posted the following words on Facebook that are worth repeating because they sum up what we all felt during the events surrounding Painting Today.

Brutcher wrote, “Showing my work alongside that of this incredible group of women painters in the most prestigious museum of contemporary realism in Europe is an honor for which I am thankful. I have reflected on the rich exchange that took place among those of us who were able to attend the opening and how in spite of never having met before, for the most part, it was as though we had. Could this be because we are bound by the same driving force in our lives, the creative process? All being women realists, our perspective is similar and our dilemmas and struggles surviving in the art world are as well. Whatever the reasons, the connection among us was electric and manifest even to those from without this group of women.”

Teresa Brutcher next to her painting entitled  William won’t tell

Teresa Brutcher next to her painting entitled William won’t tell

Yes, throw a group of female artists together and you’ll mostly find love, friendship, support, and an atmosphere that increases a sense of well-being and energy. While there’s healthy competition, there’s also a generosity to help and support, to exchange ideas and suggestions—and lots of hugs!

Megan Read and Nadine Robbins with their paintings - left Robbin’s  Mrs. McDonald , middle Read’s  Becoming , right Robbin’s  Runin on Dunkin

Megan Read and Nadine Robbins with their paintings – left Robbin’s Mrs. McDonald, middle Read’s Becoming, right Robbin’s Runin on Dunkin

How wonderful it would be to see a repeat of female artists’ exhibitions at the MEAM on an annual or biannual basis. Variation could be added by changing the premise, making adjustments to the curatorial process, selecting a specific subject matter, or by focusing on figurative artists from specific regions, especially those that have even less opportunities than we westerners do. The MEAM will truly have a huge impact on the artworld and society by continuing to celebrate International Women’s Day by tipping the scales slightly in our favor by giving female artists the opportunity to show our very best work.

Viktoria Savenkova next to her paintings  Blue 1  (left) and  Ales  (right)

Viktoria Savenkova next to her paintings Blue 1 (left) and Ales (right)

This opening at the MEAM was a highpoint in my artistic life, competing with the unveiling ceremonies of my public statues and my first solo exhibition a long time ago. My heartfelt gratitude goes out to everybody who made this evening possible and oh so very fabulous!

MEAM Director José Manual Infiesta with  Sapphire Blue  by Lorena Kloosterboer

MEAM Director José Manual Infiesta with Sapphire Blue by Lorena Kloosterboer


To see the exhibition Painting Today / Pintando Hoy visit the MEAM – European Museum of Modern Art

Barra de Ferro 5 in Barcelona, Spain

Next best option to view the exhibition is to buy the catalog HERE!

Catalog of the exhibition  Painting Today , International Women's Day of the European Museum of Modern Art (MEAM). Total of 96 pages, introduction by Didi Menendez, and biographies of the exhibiting artists, €9.

Catalog of the exhibition Painting Today, International Women’s Day of the European Museum of Modern Art (MEAM). Total of 96 pages, introduction by Didi Menendez, and biographies of the exhibiting artists, €9.


List of Participating Artists in Painting Today / Pintando Hoy

Agnieszka Nienartowicz

Aleah Chapin

Aleksandra Kalisz

Alexandra Manukyan

Anna Wypych

Anne-Christine Roda

Arina Gordienko

Carmen Chami

Catherine Creaney

Christina Grace Mastrangelo

Francien Krieg

Jen Brown

June Stratton

Kathrin Longhurst

Kelly Birkenruth

Kim Peters

Kimberly A. Torres

Kimberly Dow

Lisa Keay

Lorena Kloosterboer

Lorna May Wadsworth

Luanne Redeye

Marina Dieul

Megan Read

Melinda Borysevicz

Michelle Doll

Nadine Robbins

Nanette Fluhr

Natalie Holland

Ofelia Andrades

Pamela Wilson

Patricia Watwood

Rachel Linnemeier

Regina Jacobson

Reisha Perlmutter

Sara Scribner

Shana Levenson

Stephanie Deshpande

Stephanie Rew

Tanja Gant

Tanya Atanasova

Teresa Brutcher

Teresa Elliott

Tina Spratt

Vicki Sullivan

Victoria Selbach

Viktoria Savenkova

 

Link to Lorena’s original article here.

back
21er Haus · Abstract Expressionism · Advice · Aesthetics · Africa · African American · Ai Weiwei · Albrecht Dürer · Alcohol · Ali Cavanaugh · Amazon · Amsterdam · Andy Warhol · Animals · Animation · Antiquity · Apartheid · Archaeology · Architecture · Art History · Art installation · Art Market · Art nouveau · Art per se · Art Pharmacy · Art project · Art reception · Art Stage · Artemisia Gentileschi · Artist Project · Artist reunion · Artists about Art · Asad Raza · Asia · Astronomy · Atelier · Auction · Australia · Authenticity · Bach · Banksy · Barcelona · Baroque · Battle of the Sexes · Beauty · Belgium · Ben Enwonwu · Benin · Berlin · Bernini · Biennale · Bike · Bill Traylor · Biography · Biology · Border Film Project · Border-crossing · British Museum · Bronze · Budapest · Butterfly · Cameroon · Campbell’s Soup · Canada · Caravaggio · Cartoon · Cat · Charles Edward Perugini · Charles François Daubigny · Charts · Chicago · Children · China · Christian Art · Christianity · Cinema · City · Cityscape · Climate · Cloth · Clothes · Collection · Colours · Comic · Community · Construction · Consumption · Contemporary Art · Contemporary History · Count Ibex Collection · Countrysite · Cowboys · Craft · Crafting · Cuban Art · Cubism · Customize · Damien Hirst · Danny Lyon · Darkness · David Eichenberg · David Hockney · David Levinthal · Death · Debate · Deception · Decoration · Design · Destination · Detroit · Diego Rivera · Digi-Arts · Dimension · Diorama · Discrimination · Discussion · DNA · Dog · Domestic space · Drawing · Earthquake · Edmund Charles Tarbell · Education · Edward Hopper · Edwynn Houk Gallery · Egypt · Electricity · Élisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun · Emotions · Erasure · Ernest Lawson · Ernest Mancoba · Erwin Blumenfeld · Ethic · Ethnology · Eugène Delacroix · Eva Lewarne · Events · Exhibition · Experiment · Fake · Family · Fashion · Featured Artist · Feminism · Figurative Art · Film · Fire · Flowers · Food · Form · France · Frankfurt · Frederick Goodall · French art · Frida Kahlo · Friendship · Furniture · Futurism · Gallery · Games · Garden · Geometry · George Sand · Gerard David · Gerhard Richter · Germany · Getty · Ghana · Ghosts · Gifts · Giotto · Giovanni Bellini (Giambellino) · Glass · Goethe · Gold · Good Idea · Gothic · Goya · Graffiti · Halcyon Gallery · Handcraft · Hans von Aachen · Harlem · Health · History · Horoscope · Huang Binhong · Hungarian National Gallery · Hyperrealism · Ibrahim El Salahi · Identity · Illustration · Imagination · Impressionism · India · Individuum · Indonesia · Interieur · Internet · Interview · Iran · Israel · Italy · Ivory · Ivory Coast · Jan van Scorel · Japan · Jasper Johns · Jaume Huguet · Jean Paul Gaultier · Jean-François Baudet · Jeff Koons · Jerusalem · JMW Turner · Joachim Patinir · Johannes Vermeer · John Singer Sargent · Joseph Karl Stieler · Journey · Jules Breton · Kaari Upson · Karel Appel · Karl Lagerfeld · Katsushika Hokusai · Kerry James Marshall · Keto · Kurt Hüpfner · Landscape · Latin America · Leasure · Leonardo da Vinci · Lifestyle · Lili Ország · Lisbon · Literature · London · Lorena Kloosterboer · Lorenzo Lotto · Los Angeles · Louver Gallery · Louvre · Love · Luck · Macchiavelli · Madrid · Magic · Malangatana · Malick Sidibé · Map · Marble · Marcel Duchamp · Marco Grassi · Maria Lassnig · Martha Pulina · Mary Stevenson Cassatt · Masterpiece Project · Material Culture · Matisse · Matthew Cherry · Max Friedländer · MC Escher · MEAM · Mexican Art · Miami · Michelangelo · Middle Ages · Mies van der Rohe · Minimalism · Mining · Mitch Griffiths · Mixed Media · Mobility · Modern Art · Mona Lisa · Moon · Morto da Feltre · Mosaic · Mozambique · Mulan Gallery · Munich · Murillo · Muse · Museum · Music · Mythology · Nathan Zhou · Native Americans · Nature · Neoclassic · Netherlands · New York · Nigeria · Norway · Nudity · Object · Oil paintings · Old masters · Orientalism · Osman Hamdi Bey · Pablo Picasso · Palestine · Paper · Paris · Pattern · Peace of paper · Pen and Ink · Pencil · Perspective · Peter Lindbergh · Philadelphia · Philipp Weber · Philosophy · Photographs · Photography · Places · Poetry · Poland · Politics · Pop Art · Porcelain · Portrait · Poster · Pottery · Power · Prado Museum · Prague · Presents · Printing · Protest · Psychology · Rainforest · Ramon Pichot · Raphael · Reading · Realism · Recycling · Religion · Renaissance · René Jules Lalique · René Magritte · Restauration · Review · Rings · Robert Rauschenberg · Roccoco · Roger Kemp · Romanticism · Rome · Rosa JH Berland · Royal Academy of Arts · Ruins · Russia · Rybolovlev · SAAM · Saatchi Gallery · Salvador Dali · Sappho · School · Science · Science Fiction · Sculpture · Seattle · Self-expression · Selfie · Sensation · Seoul · Sexuality · Shadow · Shakespeare · Shana Levenson · Shanghai · Shchukin · Sheryl Luxenburg · Show · Shuang Li · Singapore · Sketch · Slavery · Social Media · Society · Sophie Matisse · Sound · South Africa · Space · Spirituality · Sport · Spray painting · Städel Museum · Star Wars · State Hermitage Museum · Statistic · Still Life · Street Art · Strings · Surrealism · Surveillance · Sweden · Symmetry · Tanzania · Tate Britain · Tattoo · Technology · Temple · Textiles · The Metropolitan Museum of Art · The National Gallery · Theatre · Time · Tina Turner · Tips · Titian · Tom Watt · Tommy Hartung · Toronto · Townscape · TRAC · Travel · Turkey · UK · Underground · United Kingdom · United States · Urban Art · Urbanism · Valentin de Boulogne · Venice · Venus · Veronese · Vienna · Vincent Van Gogh · Voodoo · War · Warsaw · Washington D.C. · Water · Watercolor · Whitney Museum · Wild West · Women · World Culture Forum · World Press Freedom Day · Yoan Capote · Zhou B Art Center

Unable to display Facebook posts.
Show error

Error: Error validating application. Application has been deleted.
Type: OAuthException
Code: 190
Please refer to our Error Message Reference.