Raising the visibility of women in design
A Woman's Work
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Exhibition view, Against Invisibility, Kunstgewerbemuseum, Dresden
© SKD, Foto: Klemens Renner
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Exhibition view, Against Invisibility, Kunstgewerbemuseum, Dresden
© SKD, Foto: Klemens Renner
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Linen cupboard, Gertrud Kleinhempel, around 1905 Manufacturer: Workshops for German household contents Theophil Mueller, Dresden
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Dressing table, Gertrud Kleinhempel, design: around 1910 Manufacturer: Workshops for German household items Theophil Müller, Dresden
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Desk, Margaret Junge, 1905/1906 Manufacturer: Werkstätten für Deutscher Hausrat Theophil Müller, Dresden Private collection
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Upholstered chair, Marie von Geldern-Egmond, around 1905 Manufacturer: Dresdner Werkstätten für Handwerkskunst, Landesamt für Denkmalpflege Sachsen, permanent loan SKD, Kunstgewerbemuseum
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Lid Vase, Else Wenz-Viëtor, 1911, private collection Manufacturer: Porzellanfabrik Weiden Gebr. Bauscher for Deutsche Werkstätten Hellerau
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Coffee pot model 234, Else Wenz-Viëtor, 1921
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Cover fabric, Else Wenz-Viëtor, around 1922
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Wallpaper pattern, Emmy Seyfried, around 1910 Stadtarchiv Breisach / Collection Tapetenfabrik Erisman & Cie.
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Yearbook of the German Workshops Hellerau, cover, Bertha Senestréy, 1928
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Wallpaper sample book of the German workshops Hellerau, around 1910 Publisher: DWH / Erismann & Cie., Stadtarchiv Breisach / Collection, wallpaper factory Erisman & Cie.
© SKD, Foto: Robert Vanis
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Portrait of Clara Möller-Coburg
© photo: unknown
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Bertha Senestréy, 1923
© photo: unknown
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Portrait of Gertrud Kleinhempel
© Historisches Museum Bielefeld
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Group photo from the symposium A Woman's Work
© David Pincer
“We are claiming space; we are connecting people; and we want to enact transformation.” This is just one of many inspiring affirmations offered up at A Woman's Work, a women-led symposium recently held at the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Dresden.The new year has just begun, but already it's clear that gender issues will remain in the foreground, propelled by the momentum of 2018, which was hailed as (another) "Year of the Woman" and bore witness to the centennial of women’s suffrage in the UK, a record-breaking number of women running for office in the US, #metoo, #timesup, normalizing breastfeeding, and an array of micro and macro actions aimed at upping equality across the globe.
Against Invisibility, the new exhibition curated by Klara Němečková at the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Dresden, examines historical gender injustices by spotlighting 50 successful but now nearly forgotten female designers from the early years of the Deutsche Werkstätten in Hellerau (1898-1938). The question that guided the curation was: How did these talented women become invisible? According to Němečková, there are multiple answers to this question, but most can be traced to the patriarchal nature of the way history has been written along with with the traditional restrictions on the kind of roles women have been allowed to occupy. Further obscuring factors include misattribution of works when designers changes their names for marriage and the bias toward highlighting the men when married couples collaborate. Then again, there's also a notable lack of histories written by women.
As a complement to this timely and eye-opening exhibition—with its charming presentation of design objects spanning the Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and early modernist styles—contemporary design thought-leaders Matylda Krzykowski and Vera Sacchetti (collaborating under the moniker Foreign Legion) hosted a symposium to call out the challenges that women in design continue to face today. Over the course of eight hours, speakers like Danah Abdulla, Pinar Demirdag, Annika Frye, Thomas Geisler, Katrin Greiling, Alice Rawsthorn, and Libby Sellers teased apart the threads of the design history tapestry to reveal its foundation of inequality and misrepresentation with the hopes of building a better tomorrow for women in design.
Education was naturally a recurring topic—not just at the elementary level where children first come to understand gender roles, but also in the higher academies where it’s important to expand the number of teaching positions held by women. Consensus formed around the educational value of seeing women in positions of power, as role models—a crucial step toward ensuring the next generation of designers is more well rounded, more diverse.
Another recurring and critical aspect of the discussion was that of visual and written language. Writer and critic Rawstorn shared professional anecdotes about how she fought for control over the imagery that accompanied her columns in the New York Times and to create exemptions to the paper's in-house style guide in order to make the language more inclusive of gender-queer designers.
In the context of a very animated and dynamic debate, a comment that left the room silent for a beat was Amelie Klein’s question: "How do we address injustice without being unjust ourselves?" Krzykowski and Sacchetti emphasized the importance of broadening the number and variety of voices that are included in the conversation. "Part of rewriting design history means listening to everyone’s voices," urged Sacchetti.
The dominance of women both on the panel and in the audience—curators, designers, educators, students, directors, and more—brought home just how far we've come already. The significant rise in the visibility of women in the world of design today is undeniable. But as Rawsthorn very articulately summed it up, "We need to build on [these achievements] with a dynamic and critical discourse... While many skirmishes have been won, others await."
All are encouraged to visit the brilliantly researched Against Invisibility at the Kunstgewerbemuseum in Dresden, which is running until March 3rd. And, if you’re in London, be sure to visit the Anni Albers retrospective at the Tate in its closing week.
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Text by
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Emma Lucek
Die England geborene Emma hat polnische Wurzeln und lebt momentan in Berlin. Mit ihren Erfahrungen im Bereich Forschung und Design findet sie nicht nur tolle neue Händler*innen für Pamono, sondern schreibt seit kurzem auch kritische Texte über Kunst, Architektur, Kulturgeschichte und natürlich Design.
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