scholarly journals Mary Kelly (sous la dir. de Mignon Nixon)

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Axelle Fariat
Keyword(s):  
1996 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. i-i
Author(s):  
Miguel A. Carranza

This special issue of the journal is on the theme “Ethnicity, Family and Community,” which was the topic of our 23rd annual conference held in March 1995 in Boulder, Colorado. Mary Kelly, our special issue editor, has selected an excellent set of quality articles focused on the theme. Nowhere more than in the field of ethnic studies do the topics of family and community play such important roles. One need only look at the dynamic changes occurring in U.S. society to see how these changes influence and are influenced by ethnic/racial families and the communities in which they reside.


Author(s):  
Kimberly Lamm

The conclusion foregrounds the claim that the artists whose artwork is the focus of Addressing the other woman – Adrian Piper, Nancy Spero, and Mary Kelly – deployed texts and images of writing to create an address that calls to viewers and asks them to participate in the project of deconstructing the sign woman. The conclusion also underscores that this artwork not only attests to the attention women artists paid to visual and textual appearance language in the late 1960s and 1970s, but also suggests feminism’s wide and rich historical impact. The writings of Angela Davis, Valerie Solanas, and Laura Mulvey help to highlight this impact, as they provide detailed historical frames for seeing the artwork’s interventions. Pointing to the work of psychoanalyst Juliet Mitchell and feminism’s struggles against the longevity of patriarchy, this last chapter argues that the artists’ and writers’ shared attention to language underscores the possibility and difficulty of reconfiguring the sign woman in the linguistic structure of the patriarchal unconscious..


Art Journal ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 74-80
Author(s):  
Juli Carson ◽  
Mary Kelly
Keyword(s):  

Art Journal ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 74
Author(s):  
Juli Carson ◽  
Mary Kelly
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Kimberly Lamm

This book analyses how three artists – Adrian Piper, Nancy Spero, and Mary Kelly – worked with the visual dimensions of language in the 1960s and 1970s. These artists used text and images of writing to challenge female stereotypes, addressing viewers and asking them to participate in the project of imagining women beyond familiar words and images of subordination. The book explores this dimension of their work through the concept of ‘the other woman,’ a utopian wish to reach women and correspond with them across similarities and differences. To make the artwork’s aspirations more concrete, it places the artists in correspondence with three writers – Angela Davis, Valerie Solanas, and Laura Mulvey – who also addressed the limited range of images through which women are allowed to become visible.


2018 ◽  
pp. 121-134
Author(s):  
Andrew Walker

Andrew Walker examines playwright Mary Kelly’s writings on village theatre and her production of agrarian pageantry for purposes of expanding notions of the genres and cultural impacts of rural modernity. Kelly, best known as the model for Miss La Trobe in Virginia Woolf’s Between the Acts, enjoyed success as a director of rural theatre in the 1920s and 1930s. This led to two influential books on rural arts, How to Make a Pageant (1936) and Village Theatre (1939). Envisioning the theatre as an outgrowth of folk religion and mythology grounded in agricultural and fertility ritual—a vision taken up to great effect by T. S. Eliot—Kelly advocated a theatre run by and on behalf of rural performers, producers, and audience. This chapter looks at her development of these ideas in print and practice as a way of examining interwar rural dramatic production writ large.


1941 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 35

All members of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics will be interested to know a little more about Miss Mary Kelly, who recently retired from many years of active service in the affairs of the Council and in the Wichita Kansas Public Schools.


October ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 168 ◽  
pp. 43-46
Author(s):  
Mary Kelly

Critical pedagogies have been informed by feminism since the 1970s, but artist Mary Kelly considers what this means as a tactic rather than a specific content. Focusing on one of the central curricular components of studio art in an institutional context, the critique, she argues that the work of art is a visual proposition, legible on its own terms, and that the artist's verbal defense does not necessarily give him/her a voice. Instead, the process of deciphering must begin with looking and understanding this as a form of listening to the artist through the work. Moreover, Kelly suggests that not to do so is, in some sense, unethical.


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