Our #mondaymuse this week: The Great Women Artists
Introducing The Great Women Artists: Every week we collaborate with one of our favourite Instagrammers, who in turn allow us a glance into their Culture Whisper Planner.
1) Rachel Whiteread exhibition, Tate Britain
The Great Women Artists says: Known for her muted castings of buildings and objects, Turner Prize winner Rachel Whiteread is set to takeover Tate Britain's exhibition space in 2017 with works that range from drawings to large sculptures.
Read more ...2) Leonora Carrington, Viktor Wynd Museum
The Great Women Artists says: A lover of Max Ernst and a friend to Picasso, Anglo-Mexican Leonora Carrington fills her Surrealist canvas with magical dreamscapes of flying animals.
Read more ...3) 'toute seule': Rebecca Allen, Charlotte Colbert, Elizabeth Murray, Nancy Spero and Rachel Whiteread, Gazelli Art House
The Great Women Artists says: This exhibition will unveil the work of five female artist's rooted in five different decades. I can't wait to wander through the changing eye of the leading figures.
Read more ...4) Terrains of the Body: Photography from the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Whitechapel Gallery
The Great Women Artists says: With the likes of Nan Goldin, Marina Abramovic and Anna Gaskell involved, this exhibition is set to be the blockbuster show of 2017.
Read more ...5) Cindy Sherman & David Salle, Skarstedt new Gallery
The Great Women Artists says: In Cindy Sherman's 'History Portraits’ she uses a range of props to create a heightened theatricality that ultimately debates the role of equality in both historical and modern society.
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6) Guerrilla Girls hit Whitechapel Gallery in exciting London exhibition
The Great Women Artists says: The Whitechapel Gallery are currently parading collated results from the legendary Guerrilla Girls' 2016 questionnaire on diversity in European art organisation.
Read more ...7) Maria Lassnig, Hauser & Wirth
The Great Women Artists says: Looking forward to seeing Hauser and Wirth's in-depth exhibit of Maria Lassnig's psychologically charged portraits that make use of her famous pale and glossy painting palettes.
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