!W.A.R.: !Women Art Revolution
!W.A.R.: !Women Art Revolution
| 01 June 2011 (USA)
!W.A.R.: !Women Art Revolution Trailers

Through intimate interviews, provocative art, and rare, historical film and video footage, this feature documentary reveals how art addressing political consequences of discrimination and violence, the Feminist Art Revolution radically transformed the art and culture of our times.

Similar Movies to !W.A.R.: !Women Art Revolution
Reviews
Bardlerx

Strictly average movie

... View More
TaryBiggBall

It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.

... View More
Brendon Jones

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

... View More
Jerrie

It's a good bad... and worth a popcorn matinée. While it's easy to lament what could have been...

... View More
Mike B

Where are the paintings? Where are the sculptures?It's about the talk. It's about feminism. It's about Civil Right's. It's about "The Movement". It's about politics. It's about the 60's.It's all superficial. Short 30 second sound bytes from artists. Then on to another sound byte. Doesn't look at anything in any detail. Discusses briefly "The Dinner Party" with some congressional footage – then moves quickly on to another topic lest we become bored.Avant Garde performance "art" is tossed in to entertain us – lest we become bored.Nothing on Frieda Kahlo. Nothing on Kiki Smith. Nothing on Rosa Bonheur. Nothing on Camille Claudel. Nothing on Georgia O'Keefe. Nothing on Carole A. Feuerman. Nothing on Mary Pratt...Kathe Kollwitz only gets a brief sound byte lest we become bored.Does not mention the National Museum of Women in the Arts (founded in 1981).Women artists are not just from the U.S.Women artists didn't just start in the 1960's.

... View More
immovable_object

This is a wonderful film. It plunges you right into the middle of it all - it gives you a real feeling of the excitement of the women's revolution in the making. You can feel that it's made by a participant in the scene - and although the filmmaker never intrudes, she does make herself fabulously known after all. The film includes lots of different artists, but it is organized along thematic lines, so you aren't just reviewing a cast of "characters" as in so many worthy but predictable documentaries. Instead you're engaging with a range of different issues that the artists attacked. Made with panache, humor, and smarts, it is an invaluable tribute to the times. The form fits the content, and the content is moving, stimulating, and inspiring, as a history and as an illumination of art-making and artists.

... View More
KarilDaniels

Don't miss this truly great documentary, a most amazing, totally unique and deeply inspirational film by Lynn Hershman Leeson (Teknolust, Strange Culture), which will stand alone as a history lesson in gender politics and how that plays out in the art world. It is playing NOW, for a short run at the Lumiere Theatre on California St. in San Francisco. Hershman Leeson has spent 40 years collecting legacy footage and pursuing interviews to make this rare gem, which reveals the unknown history of women's art and the ostracism of major female artists from mainstream acceptance by museums & major galleries, solely because of their gender. I loved it and would gladly see it multiple times!

... View More