Five WY artists converge in a traveling exhibition titled Wyoming Women to Watch. 

Five artists from across Wyoming converge at Shari Brownfield Fine Art this March as the first stop in a traveling exhibition titled Wyoming Women to Watch.  While only geography and gender connect the artists, each of the five were shortlisted for inclusion in a major exhibition at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, DC.

Officially known as the Equality State, in 1870 Wyoming was the first to recognize women’s right to vote.  150 plus years later, Wyoming women persevere in their efforts for the state to live up to its moniker.  The National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA) in Washington, DC opened in 1987 as the first museum in the world solely dedicated to championing women through the arts.  Nearly two decades ago the museum began their critically-acclaimed Women to Watch exhibition series, a collaborative effort between NMWA and state-led committees who help underrepresented regional artists gain a national stage. In 2021 a Wyoming outreach committee was formed (WYNMWA) to help advocate for Wyoming women in the arts and include Wyoming artists on the national stage.

 

Unlike a standard group show, the Wyoming Women to Watch traveling exhibition allows each artist their own space to express their individual process and practice. Selected by Wyoming curator Dr. Tammi Hanawalt, the show honors each artist’s singular voice. From Jennifer Rife’s (Cheyenne) ephemeral land art to Bronwyn Minton’s (Jackson) nine foot ceramic installation, to Leah Hardy’s (Laramie) miniature anthropomorphized insects, and Katy Ann Fox’s (Jackson) attention to overlooked moments, we see a connection between human interaction with the natural world; likely an inspiration from living in our wild and expansive landscape.

 

The Wyoming artist selected to be featured in NMWA’s Women to Watch exhibition is Sarah Ortegon, a Wind River mixed-media artist.  Her oeuvre combines painting, beadwork and performance to retell narratives of modern Indigenous women like herself. Ortegon is an accomplished artist, actress, and dancer who was also named Miss Native American USA in 2013.  She will perform her signature black light Jingle Dance during the opening reception at Shari Brownfield Fine Art.

The exhibition will run from March 4th to May 14th, 2024 with an opening reception on Wednesday, March 13th from 5-7pm.  A performance and brief discussion with several of the artists, members of the WYNMWA Committee, and curator will begin at 5:30pm.  At the end of the Jackson exhibition, the show will travel to its next stop at the Ucross Foundation in Northern Wyoming.

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Wyoming Women to Watch Exhibit will open in Jackson on March 13, 2024

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New Worlds: Women to Watch 2024