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Feminist substances explores how artists used plastics to challenge normative ideas and sexist discourses in 1960s and 1970s art and society at large. Contesting the notion that industrial materials were primarily the domain of men artists, it considers how women engaged with plastics to address issues of social reproduction, motherhood, memory, desire and illness. The book argues that synthetic substances were uniquely suited to materialise feminist concerns because they were relatively new – and thus not predetermined by normative conventions – and related to the everyday. Structured around case studies of Carla Accardi, Lea Lublin and Alina Szapocznikow, it combines close readings of artworks with broader reflections on their social contexts in Italy, Argentina and France. Feminist substances makes a valuable contribution to the study of materiality in art, reconsidered through the lens of gender. Attending to questions of labour, value, and the hierarchies between art and commodities, it also examines the intersection of material and class. This richly illustrated book offers a singular look at materials that continue to shape and affect our everyday lives. It focuses on a period when plastics still held great promise, shortly before their demise in the wake of the oil price crises and growing awareness of their harmfulness. Discussing artworks and exhibitions as well as phenomena from everyday life, the book sheds light on the ambivalent meanings of plastics that still inform our complicated love-hate relationship with them.
This book is included in DOAB.
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