Arts | Lectures | Seminars | Gatherings

Carving a Life: Women Sculptors

Fifty and Better Spring Session

Carving a Life: Women Sculptors

In the past decades, art historians have finally researched, praised, and exhibited the contributions of women artists to the world. The majority of these artists have been painters. Yet, a dimension of the contributions of women artists lay not on the two-dimensional canvas, but rather in the third-dimensional art of sculpture. In our sessions, we will examine the lives and art of the women who challenged the masculine arts by taking up the chisel, bending metal, and carving wood. Their artworks produced new forms of sculpture instigated by the touch of the female hand.

Do we view art differently depending on the sex of the creator?  Do the social and economic experiences of women influence their artwork? Are there male and female associations with the materials used in sculpting? Let’s join together and engage with individual sculptures for a deeper understanding of their meanings and their creators.

Christine Maasdam, M.A., holds a Master in Humanities and a B.A. in Cultural Geography. Her art studies include The Courtauld Institute of Art in London, The Smithsonian Early Enrichment Center in D.C. and more. Maasdam is a member of the International Foundation for Cultural Property Protection and holds a certificate from Trident Manor on Protection of Cultural Venues.  

Fifty and Better was designed to offer university-level courses and lectures (no tests, no homework) taught by experts in the field, and to host social engagement activities for people age 50 and older.


Register

Register by April 1 at 12 p.m.

Sponsored By
Fifty and Better

Contact

Christina Tierney
fab@callutheran.edu
805-493-3290
Website

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