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ART AGAINST GENDER - BASED VIOLENCE. SO MANY WOMEN IN ONE AND THE SAME

Collage of faces, flowers and stripes
Image design © Patricia Bolinches

 

 

 

 

PROGRAM OF COMPLEMENTARY ACTIVITIES

 

A verse from one of the most renown Valencian poets, María Beneyto, provides the title for this exhibition, from her poem “Criatura múltiple” in which she delves deep inside her own multiplicity, her strength and her vulnerability.

 

This exhibition was designed in honour of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on the 25th of November. It showcases a variety of artworks from different collections with a central theme—the condemnation of gender violence and the demand for women’s liberation. According to statistics from the United Nations, one in every three women have suffered some form of gender-based violence in their lifetimes, and around the world, every 11 minutes, a woman or girl is killed by a family member.

 

This project aims to build an illustrative narrative condemning gender-based violence in all its forms through a wide selection of pieces from different private collections (Pilar Citoler, Inelcom, DKV...) and, in particular, pieces pertaining to the endowment funds of the following Valencian public universities: University of Alacant, Miguel Hernández University, Universitat Jaume I, Universitat Politècnica de València and the Universitat de València.

 

The exhibition is divided into four thematic spheres in which each space addresses violence against women from a different perspective:

 

Ending gender-based violence

 

The exhibition begins with the first thematic sphere titled “Ending gender-based violence”. In this space, you will find pieces that either aim to give visibility to different facets of gender-based violence or pieces denouncing the violence against women in all its forms. They address the violence in a broad manner and often quite subtly. The works contend with various topics, such as the spaces that harbour violence, media and the press, social norms that demonise women, or the physical traces left by gender-based violence.


Women are not weapons of war

 

This space draws the viewers’ attention to a violence suffered by women that is often silenced by the very context in which it occurs. In armed conflicts, beyond the violence suffered by all, women suffer an additional violence, specific to their gender. As published by International Amnesty (based on UN data) girls are 90% less likely to have access to education than boys in conflict zones. In addition, they are often victims of child marriage, slave labour and recruitment as child soldiers.
This thematic area aims to give the role of gender in armed conflicts and war the visibility it deserves and to raise awareness on how women and girls are disproportionately affected in these circumstances.


Against sexist stereotypes

 

This space showcases diverse works that speak out about the importance of recognising sexist stereotypes in the visual world. Through the years, fashion, films, advertising and art have fabricated an unrealistic model of women and girls in society, one that is often linked to either a traditionally domestic image or a hyper-sexualised, objectifying one. For this reason, the pieces included in this section admonish these sexual stereotypes in visual media and argue the importance of challenging them in order to establish a more realistic and egalitarian image of women in society.
 

Resilience and survival

 

In contrast to the three previous thematic spheres, which all aim to raise awareness with regard to the multiple forms of violence against women (gender-based violence, sexism and visual stereotypes), this section is dedicated to female resilience and survival. A space for recovery, to reclaim the path of overcoming violence and use it to create a fairer, kinder future for women. Resilience is the ability to adapt when confronted with adversity or misfortune, but resilience is also the ability to survive the pain, not to look back, but rather forward to a new, stronger, more durable and more sustainable future. The artists whose work is displayed in this section speak to us about the different ways of healing and overcoming gender violence.

 

 

Estefanía Martí Saénz.“The ravens that gilded the woman”, 2015, mixed media on printed canvas , 160 x 220 cm. Martínez Guerricabeitia collection - UV

 

 

Sections and artists:

 

Ending gender-based violence

Concha Jerez – New Collection Pilar Citoler

Estefanía Martín Sáenz – UV Collection

Sandra Gamarra – INELCOM Collection

Alessandra Spranzi – INELCOM Collection

Isabel Oliver – UPV Collection

Nuria Rodríguez – UPV Collection

Julia Galán - UJI Collection

Maribel Domènech - UV Collection

 

Women are not weapons of war

Carmen Calvo – New Collection Pilar Citoler

Doris Salcedo – New Collection Pilar Citoler

María Carbonell – UV Collection

Gabriela Bettini – DKV Collection

Núria Güell – DKV Collection

Art al Quadrat – UMH Collection

Ana Teresa Ortega Aznar - UV Collection

Mª Jesús González  / Patricia Gómez - UV Collection

Against sexist stereotypes

Sanja Iveković – New Collection Pilar Citoler

Mavi Escamilla – UV Collection

Sophie Calle – INELCOM Collection

Ángela García Codoñer – UMH Collection and UPV Collection

Maruja Mallo - UV Collection

Ingrid Lozano - University of Alicante

Resilience and survival

Soledad Córdoba – New Collection Pilar Citoler

Marina Vargas – New Collection Pilar Citoler

Isabel Villar – UV Collection

Marina Núñez – DKV Collection

Hanna Jarzabek - UJI Collection

María María Acha-Kutscher - University of Alicante

Úrsula Ochoa - University of Alicante

Päivi Koskinen - University of Alicante

 

 

The project is complemented by theinstallation titled  INDIGNADES where artist María María Acha-Kutscher shows the current female activism in the form of protests.

 

Arranged visits for groupsdm and mediation program:

voluntariat.cultural@uv.es

96 3531076

www.uv.es/cultura