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- Sister_Chapel abstract "The Sister Chapel is a visual arts installation, conceived by Ilise Greenstein and created by thirteen women artists during the feminist art movement. The installation premiered in January 1978 at P.S.1 in Long Island City, New York. It featured eleven panels that represented contemporary and historically significant women, deities and mythological figures, and conceptual heroic women:Bella Abzug—the Candidate (1976) by Alice NeelBetty Friedan as the Prophet (1976) by June BlumMarianne Moore (1977) by Betty HollidayJoan of Arc (1976) by Elsa M. GoldsmithArtemisia Gentileschi (1976) by May StevensFrida Kahlo (1976) by Shirley GorelickGod (1977) by Cynthia MailmanDurga (1977) by Diana KurzLilith (1976) by Sylvia SleighWomanhero (1977) by Martha EdelheitSelf-Portrait as Superwoman (Woman as Culture Hero) (1977–78) by Sharon WybrantsEach monumental figure occupied a nine-by-five-foot canvas in a twelve-sided space, into which viewers were invited to enter. Above the eleven panels, which formed an enclosure around the viewers, was a circular abstract painted ceiling by Ilise Greenstein (1976). Viewers were invited to imagine and see themselves in the company of historically significant figures in developing a new way of looking at history, culture, and themselves.A tent-like fabric enclosure, designed by Maureen Connor in 1976, was never executed, although a model was constructed and shown at the premiere exhibition.The nominal pun regarding the Sistine Chapel ceiling was intentional. As the Sistine Chapel represented an apex of global and western culture, and a realization of the patriarchal conceptualization of history, The Sister Chapel comprised an invitation for people to re-imagine familiar, often unconscious presumptions about gender roles, recognition and relations from a female perspective. As Gloria Feman Orenstein explained in 1977, \"This chapel, then, is not about the creation of man, but the birth of woman.\"After its premiere at P.S.1, The Sister Chapel was exhibited at SUNY–Stony Brook (November–December 1978), Cayuga County Community College (November–December 1979), and the Associate Artists Gallery in Fayetteville, New York (March–April 1980). At the last two venues, Greenstein's Ceiling for the Sister Chapel and Wybrants's Self-Portrait as Superwoman were not exhibited.The Sister Chapel will be exhibited in its entirety, for the first time in thirty-eight years, at the Rowan University Art Gallery in Glassboro, New Jersey, from March 28 through June 30, 2016.".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageID "40126494".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageLength "3838".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageOutDegree "29".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageRevisionID "707044239".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Alice_Neel.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Artemisia_Gentileschi.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Bella_Abzug.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Betty_Friedan.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Category:1978_in_art.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Category:Feminism_and_the_arts.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Category:Installation_art_works.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Cayuga_Community_College.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Cynthia_Mailman.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Diana_Kurz.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Durga.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Fayetteville,_New_York.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Feminist_art_movement_in_the_United_States.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Frida_Kahlo.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Glassboro,_New_Jersey.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink God.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Joan_of_Arc.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Lilith.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Marianne_Moore.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Martha_Edelheit.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Maureen_Connor.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink May_Stevens.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink MoMA_PS1.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Rowan_University.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Shirley_Gorelick.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Sistine_Chapel_ceiling.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink State_University_of_New_York.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLink Sylvia_Sleigh.
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLinkText "''The Sister Chapel''".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sister Chapel".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageWikiLinkText "The Sister Chapel".
- Sister_Chapel wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Sister_Chapel subject Category:1978_in_art.
- Sister_Chapel subject Category:Feminism_and_the_arts.
- Sister_Chapel subject Category:Installation_art_works.
- Sister_Chapel hypernym Installation.
- Sister_Chapel type MilitaryStructure.
- Sister_Chapel comment "The Sister Chapel is a visual arts installation, conceived by Ilise Greenstein and created by thirteen women artists during the feminist art movement. The installation premiered in January 1978 at P.S.1 in Long Island City, New York.".
- Sister_Chapel label "Sister Chapel".
- Sister_Chapel sameAs Q17104513.
- Sister_Chapel sameAs m.0wjtcm0.
- Sister_Chapel sameAs Q17104513.
- Sister_Chapel wasDerivedFrom Sister_Chapel?oldid=707044239.
- Sister_Chapel isPrimaryTopicOf Sister_Chapel.