The Power of the Pink Curves

The pink curves are a metaphor for female body curves. There seems to be a power in the curve. Science says that men genetically are attracted to women with abundant curves because they will be more fertile and healthier. Women dress to accentuate their curves thereby recognizing the power of the curve.

Our society seems to be focused on the reproductive attributes of a woman’s body rather than her accomplishments as a person.  I have read that it is easier to change the views of an entire society rather than those of an individual.  People follow the general consensus of the group.  My personal upbringing supports that premise.  My mother, a product of 1940’s and 1950 thinking, shared the prevailing view that women were mere chattels in their relationships.  It was a man’s house and a man’s children and the female was to nurture and bear children.   Women accepted this role and tried to marry well to increase their status.  The first feminist movement started in reaction to this culture. This movement was more aggressive in nature.   The later movements have been more successful in garnering society’s approval and are less aggressive and more intellectual in nature.   Art and artists, through the feminist movement, have been fighting to change society’s view and women’s status.  Throughout history, there have been very few female artists that are recognized in the Art World. Artists until about 1940’s were primarily men.  Even today female artists are still fighting for recognition in the Art World.

Judy Chicago’s ‘The Dinner Party’ has inspired me.   The reaction to this art in the 70’s represents the resistance to change society’s’ view of the female role.   It both honors women’s accomplishments and at the same time reduces these women to their female parts and female duties.  This work is a milestone in the feminist movement.

Barbara Kruger a successful businesswoman used her art and social status to promote the female perspective. She is a conceptual artist that used a combination of type and image to convey a direct feminist cultural critique. Her work has inspired me as well as Judy Chicago’s.

 The Power of the Pink Curves represents the vacuous way women have been perceived by men and the women who use their curves to gain power over the male thereby propagating the premise that women are vacuous and only to be viewed as sexual possessions of their partner.  It seems to me that women must change their thinking as well as men.  If women dress to show off curves and use that power, are they not promoting inequality?  The power of the pink curves is directed at both sexes. 

The insulation stands approximately 6.5 feet high and 3 feet wide with a base of concrete.

I am proposing to cover the ‘pink curves’ with concrete after the first exhibition of the work.  The covering of the curves is symbolic of the desire to change thinking towards the female form.   

Lips and Hair

A mixed media painting representing what women promote as an asset– lips and hair. We fail to see the person only the façade presents. 8"x10".