The Jewish Museum is currently exhibiting: "Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism" which I was able to see recently. Here's the description:
Over the past fifty years, feminists have defied an art world dominated  by men, deploying direct action and theory while making fundamental  changes in their everyday lives. Shifting the Gaze: Painting and Feminism  explores the widespread influence of feminist practice on the styles  and methods of painting from the 1960s to the present. The provocative  paintings on view here embody the tension between individual expression  and collective politics, between a traditional medium and radical  action.
While not a survey of Jewish feminist art, Shifting the Gaze  is drawn primarily from the collection of The Jewish Museum, and  features seven new acquisitions from the past three years. Some art  historians have argued that Jewish
feminists are particularly attuned  to sexuality, radical politics, and injustice because of Jewish  involvement in modernism and leftist politics. Indeed, Jewish painters  have played decisive roles in founding and sustaining major feminist  theories and art collectives. This exhibition explores how social  revolutions take place not only in the realm of ideas and politics, but  in style and form.
And a preview from the Jewish Daily Foreward:
The last image is the striking "Sky Flesh" from Judy Chicago!
An accompanying lecture series by Dr Nanette Salomon is currently taking place. 
From The Teachings of Silvanus: "Do not be a sausage which is full of useless things."
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