Nancy Spero (1926-2009)

GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Nancy Spero was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1926. She attended the University of Colorado, Boulder (1944–1945), received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1949), and studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Atelier André L’Hote in Paris (1949–1950). In 1951, she married the visual artist Leon Golub (b. 1922), and the couple lived in Chicago until 1959, when Spero and Golub moved to Paris where they lived until 1964. Spero led the feminist art movement in the 1960s, when she began producing unapologetic statements against the pervasive abuse of Western privilege and male dominance. Her work frequently draws imagery and subject matter from historical events such as the torture associated with the 1960s and 1970s regimes in Argentina, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and South Africa, as well as the Holocaust and the Vietnam War. Her figures co-exist in nonhierarchical compositions on canvases and scrolls alike, reinforcing the principles of equality and tolerance.

Adapted from
DMA label copy, November 2014.

NOTES
%UMO Review for Image Asset

ASSOCIATED CONTENT CHUNKS (list applicable note links)

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

Photograph of Nancy Spero in her studio, in New York City, 1973.
Source: The War Series, Charta, Wikimedia Commons, Fair Use, accessed July 14, 2016
UMO: 265933626* Reivew

WEB RESOURCES

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES (digitized/non-digitized)

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
set operator as OR
Apply to constituents where id equals 105448
apply to objects where constituent_id equals 105448

rules_operator
OR
General Description
Nancy Spero was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1926. She attended the University of Colorado, Boulder (1944–1945), received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1949), and studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and Atelier André L’Hote in Paris (1949–1950). In 1951, she married the visual artist Leon Golub (b. 1922), and the couple lived in Chicago until 1959, when Spero and Golub moved to Paris where they lived until 1964. Spero led the feminist art movement in the 1960s, when she began producing unapologetic statements against the pervasive abuse of Western privilege and male dominance. Her work frequently draws imagery and subject matter from historical events such as the torture associated with the 1960s and 1970s regimes in Argentina, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and South Africa, as well as the Holocaust and the Vietnam War. Her figures co-exist in nonhierarchical compositions on canvases and scrolls alike, reinforcing the principles of equality and tolerance.

Adapted from
DMA label copy, November 2014.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources
(digitized/non-digitized)

Web Resources

Notes
%UMO Review for Image Asset

rules
Apply To
Constituents
id
Equals
105448
tags
#draft
#completed
@Bilal-Gore
*Contemporary Art
Paris (France): TGN: 7008038
Ecole des Beaux-Arts (Paris): ULAN: 500310120
%pictionJP
feminism: AAT: 300055786
Cleveland (Ohio/United States): TGN: 7013608
Chicago (Illinois/United States): TGN: 7013596
Art Institute of Chicago: ULAN: 500304669
Spero_Nancy: ULAN: 500060537
Golub_Leon: ULAN: 500003430
source file
artists_and_designers-0221.xml.nores