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Paperback Insurgent Muse: Life and Art at the Woman's Building Book

ISBN: 0872864030

ISBN13: 9780872864030

Insurgent Muse: Life and Art at the Woman's Building

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Book Overview

In the 1970's, the West Coast feminist arts movement coalesced around the Woman's Building in Los Angeles. Founded by artist Judy Chicago, the Woman's Building was conceived as a "public center for women's culture." Women from across the country were drawn there to be part of a community engaged in the exploration of what a female-centered culture might mean.

In Insurgent Muse, Terry Wolverton chronicles her own 13-year involvement in the Woman's Building. Arriving as a young art student in 1976, she stayed on to become a teacher and co-founder of the Lesbian Art Project and, eventually, the Building's executive director. Her journey-emblematic of many women who sought to redefine themselves in the light of feminism-entails confrontation with the damages of sexism, the pitfalls of utopian community, and the forces of social backlash.

Insurgent Muse is a powerful testament to the importance of feminist thought and the ongoing need for it-by women and men-today.

"The spirit of the legendary Woman's Building lives on in this unflinchingly brave and tender memoir. Terry Wolverton's Insurgent Muse is witty, heart-rending, superbly honest and deeply moving, providing an acute social analysis of a young life and a memorable era of feminism that fueled so much art and so many epiphanies. The great work of the Woman's Building deserves this book."--Lucy Lippard, author of The Pink Glass Swan: Selected Feminist Essays on Art

"The Woman's Building became a North Star on a dream map for women who were looking to redefine their lives and work. And its history--rich, splintered, groundbreaking--is the subject of a new book."--Los Angeles Times

"As her memoir illustrates, being a woman artist in the mid-1970s was profoundly revolutionary."--Lesbian News

"Her documentation of the ideals, debates, and out-and-out battles waged during this important time in the feminist movement will give young women both a surprising and relatable snapshot of the era . . . An inspirational read."--Bust Magazine

"Poet and novelist Wolverton describes her life and work at . . . the Woman's Building, a center for feminist art and culture in Los Angeles... provides an intimate look at the organizational struggles and triumphs. Recommended for public and academic libraries with extensive women's studies or art history collections, particularly on the West Coast."--Library Journal

"Is any individual life a representative life? Terry Wolverton's seems to be in so many ways. Her searingly honest memoir tells what it was like to be a woman, an artist, a lesbian during those heady, storm and stress decades of the 1970s and '80s. It's all here--the multi-lover dyko dramas, the intersection of personal and political, the Coming Out and Recovery and remembering sexual abuse movements, the rise and fall of a women's cultural center, the Woman's Building in L.A. Wolverton has a poet's sense of the complexities of the interior life and an eye witness's intimacy with that era. Anyone wanting to know what it was like to be a woman, an artist, a lesbian at the end of the last American century will find this book indispensable."--Rebecca Brown, author of The Terrible Girls and The Dogs (both published by City Lights)

Terry Wolverton is the author of the novel Bailey's Beads and two collections of poetry, Black Slip and Mystery Bruise. She has also edited numerous anthologies of gay and lesbian fiction, including His and Hers (Vols I-III).

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Passion's History

I saw Wolverton speak at a California Studies Conference and felt astonished that an organization like the Women's Building existed in Los Angeles and isn't better known. Her memoir will correct that, melding her passion for bringing a dream to reality with her attempts--not always successful--to change lesbians' own ideas of how they are in the world. This is a beautifully wrought and constructed book and worth reading as a woman's journey even if you have no special interest in Los Angeles, lesbians, art, or feminism. Ms. Wolverton's work serves to remind us that the personal IS political and that one person really can make a difference.

Personal, Moving and Powerful

In writing about herself and the "glory days" of the Women's Building in Los Angeles, Terry Wolverton has given us a deeply personal and moving account of women's struggle for recognition, not only in the arts, but in society, in life and in one's own eyes. "Insurgent Muse" ultimately becomes the story of the redemptive nature of creative expression.

Extremely Important Book for Understanding Art and Feminism

A woman has to search high and low to find any book that comes close to Wolverton's Insurgent Muse when looking for a truly feminist history of women and art in this country. Wolverton takes the feminist discourse course by blending in her own story with very honest critique and appraisal of the influence of Los Angeles' Women's Building on helping women bridge the gender gap in visual and performing art. True to the notion that "the personal is political" Wolverton recounts her own journey from the Midwest and her own journey on her way to becoming a self-realized artist and person. I think some of her points along the way are very important and do blend with feminist literary criticism, for example, that the developing woman and the developing artist are most often one and the same, that these two stories cannot be separated out from a woman's personality.Though, it must be said of Insurgent Muse, the best thing about it is just that it is a damn good read. Historical and feminist criticism, many times, can be so dry and theoretical (on purpose, you think. Maybe academics think they get brownie highbrow points for that.) that many women are discouraged from reading it. Wolverton's book blends theory, personal history, historical anecdote into something that is insightful, informative, and enjoyable!

Terrific book

I loved this book. I found the historical aspects fascinating and it made me feel as though I was in the thick of it. It expertly weaved personal history within the social context of the feminist art movement. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good read.

poignantly informative but also funny as hell

I found Terry Wolverton's memoir about her time at the Los Angeles Women's Building not only poignantly informative but also funny as hell in all the right places. She seemed to me to approach her memories and experience there with a sincere sensitivity as well as a sense of humor about the general self-seriousness of youth. Never poking fun at the accomplishments or goals of either the women's movement itself or the feminist art movement within it, she still manages to make an historical (though personal) account of an important time feel like a clear and simple story that a smart, witty friend is telling you. I found Insurgent Muse to be an insightful, sometimes grave, often amusing, always loving account of one woman's coming of age in a time when some specific expressions of feminism were themselves just being born. And as a younger generation feminist myself, I loved reading about the trailblazers who took their own explorations and discoveries seriously enough to create a reality they wanted to live in, both artistically and otherwise.
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