- Apply
- Visit
- Request Info
- Give
Published on August 16, 2022
Eastern Connecticut State University is the first stop of a traveling art exhibition titled “Women at War,” showcasing a leading selection of women artists working in Ukraine. Presented in the university’s Art Gallery, the exhibition runs from Sept. 12 – Oct. 15 with an opening reception on Sept. 15 at 4 p.m.
“Women at War” is curated by Monika Fabijanska and presented by the prestigious Fridman Gallery in New York City in partnership with Voloshyn Gallery in Kyiv, Ukraine. The contemporary exhibition provides a context for the current war via art of varied media. Several works in the exhibition were made following Russia’s full-scale invasion on Feb. 24; others were made following the 2014 annexation of Crimea.
“War is central to history and history has been written (and painted) by men,” said Fabijanska. “This exhibition provides a platform for female narrators of history and examines the perception of war as gendered. Women are generally absent from historical accounts of war, but violating a woman is seen as a violation of land and nation… But is war indeed gendered?”
Fabijanska highlighted the many women who have joined the Ukrainian armed forces in the current war, while acknowledging the atrocities that Ukrainians of all genders have recently endured. “Many artists in this exhibition struggle with the notion of victimhood,” she said, “and pose the question in what ways women have agency during war.”
According to Fabijanska, “Women at War” also serves as an introduction to Ukrainian and other Eastern European styles of feminism, which differ from popular feminism of the West. “Finally, ‘Women at War’ will contribute to a conversation about how national identity is tied to the perception of women’s role in society,” she said.
“There are parallels between the fight for Ukraine’s independence and the fight for women’s equality in other countries,” said Fabijanska. “They stem from the paradoxes of the Soviet Union, where early modernist, anti-nationalist and feminist promises remained but a fig leaf of propaganda in the brutal and misogynist patriarchal empire it became.”
The Art Gallery will host several events related to “Women at War” throughout the duration of the exhibition:
All events and admission to the gallery are free and open to the public. The gallery is open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from noon-4 p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday from noon-7 p.m.; Saturday from 11 a.m-4 p.m.; and by appointment.
For more information, visit https://www.easternct.edu/art-gallery/ or contact the gallery at (860) 465-4659 or wintnerj@easternct.edu .
Written by Michael Rouleau