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1 Life and career  





2 Teaching  





3 Writing on feminism and art  





4 References  





5 External links  














Irene Peslikis







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Irene Peslikis (October 7, 1943 – November 28, 2002) was an American feminist artist, activist, and educator. She was one of the early founders and organizers in the women's art movement, especially on the east coast.[1]

Life and career[edit]

Irene Peslikis spent her life in New York City. She was born into a Greek working-class family in Queens.[2]: 46  She began her studies in art at the Pratt Institute after completing high school in 1962, before breaking away in 1963 to help found The New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture.[1] She graduated from Queens College in New York in 1973 and earned an MFA from the City College of New York in 1983.[3]

Peslikis organized the first show of Second Wave women artists.[1] She was a founder of the New York Feminist Art Institute, which ran a full-time radical feminist art education program for women for years.[4] With another feminist artist, Patricia Mainardi, Marjorie Kramer and Lucia Vernarelli, Peslikis founded the journal Women & Art, which helped to make the artist Alice Neel famous.[1][3]

She was a founder of the NoHo GalleryinManhattan, one of the first cooperative feminist art galleries. Her political cartoons, widely circulated in the early Women's Liberation Movement years & published in feminist journals and in collections of the feminist movement like Dear Sisters: Dispatches from the Women’s Liberation Movement. Peslikis was one of the earliest members of Redstockings, the leading Feminist women’s theoretical and consciousness- raising group in New York City as well as a member of the earlier group New York Radical Women and was a key organizer and participant of the Redstocking abortion speak-out at Washington Square Methodist Church in 1969.[5] She was also active in the Greek community.

Teaching[edit]

Peslikis taught courses on painting, drawing, visual arts orientation, women and art studio workshop, and contemporary perspectives on art at a number of post-secondary institutions including the City College of New York, the College of Staten Island, the College of New Rochelle and Ramapo College.[3]

Writing on feminism and art[edit]

Peslikis wrote "Resistances to Consciousness" (printed in Notes from the Second Year), an important paper for understanding consciousness raising and women's resistance to it.[6][2]: 200  She also contributed to the Archives of American Art "Art World in Turmoil" oral history project with Patricia Mainardi.[7] She published pieces on art and art history and criticism in Rozinanta, Demokratia and Eleftheri-Patrida.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Rosalyn Baxandall. "IRENE PESLIKIS. TOO SOON -- A LOSS FOR FEMINISM AND ART". Retrieved 2014-03-21.
  • ^ a b Rosen, Ruth (2000). The World Split Open: How the Modern Women's Movement Changed America. New York, NY: Viking. ISBN 9780670814626.
  • ^ a b c Jodi Berkowitz; Aisha Peay (2008). "Historical Note". Guide to the Irene Peslikis Papers, 1957-2002 and undated. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  • ^ NYFAI. "Bios of Founders". Board of Directors. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  • ^ Echols, Alice (1989). Daring to Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967-1975. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 140-142. ISBN 9780816617876.
  • ^ "June 1969: A Blast of Redstockings Feminism". Redstockings.org. Retrieved 2014-03-21.
  • ^ Archives of American Art. "Oral history interview with Patricia Mainardi and Irene Peslikis, 1972". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2014-03-21.
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Irene_Peslikis&oldid=1218050467"

    Categories: 
    1943 births
    2002 deaths
    20th-century American artists
    Artists from New York City
    American feminist artists
    Queens College, City University of New York alumni
    American people of Greek descent
    City College of New York faculty
    New York Radical Women members
    Redstockings members
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