Due to curator Neysa Page-Lieberman’s layout of the exhibit and the art pieces individual meanings, the Not Ready to Make Nice exhibit clearly expresses the Guerrilla Girls fight for feminism and social change.
The curator is able to create a general idea for the meaning of the exhibit for each person that visits the exhibit. The general idea that the curator makes will help guide the viewer when he begins to analyze individual art pieces. In the Not Ready to Make Nice art exhibit, curator Neysa Paige-Lieberman expresses the Guerrilla Girls argument of how woman are not equally represented in museums by creating a general idea or meaning. The first art piece that the viewer glances at creates the general idea for all the art pieces within the exhibit. When a visitor first walks into the door of the Not Ready to Make Nice exhibit, he or she is instantly directed to look at the massive banner located on the far wall. You would think that the viewer would not be drawn to look at the far side of the exhibit because it is easier for the viewer to look at the pieces that are nearby. In this exhibit, the viewer is drawn to look at the banner due to the lighting in the exhibit and the size of the …show more content…
Also the Guerrilla Girls art keeps their anonymous profile amongst society because they don’t express any opinions in their works. In these art pieces, the viewer is shown some of the characteristics that make up a Guerrilla Girl and how those characteristics connect to society. One art piece that shows some characteristics of a Guerrilla Girl is The Love and Hate Letters. In this art piece there are three clear characteristics that show how the Guerrilla Girls are able to have an affect social change while still remaining anonymous in society. The three characteristics are the awareness of society’s counterarguments, unbiasedness and the allowing public of representation. The Love and Hate Letters is a wall in the exhibit that contains a collection of letters sent into the Guerrilla Girls from random members of society. In these letters, people are allowed to express any idea directly to the Guerrilla Girls. This art piece shows the viewer the response that the Guerrilla Girls receive from members of public. The response of the public in this art piece makes the viewer aware of the varied counterarguments that are formed from the Guerrilla Girls opinions on feminism. These counterarguments educate the viewer of the controversy of feminism in art and do not force an opinion onto