| THE ORGANIZERS |
| Exhibitions | Artist Statement | |
| The Organizers | ||
| Courtesan Adorned | ||
| Mini Learned Ladies | ||
| Thirteen | ||
| History Adorned | ||
| History Adorned : Teams | ||
| Last Season | ||
| Anonymous Framed | ||
| In Situ | ||
| The Painted Ladies |
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The Women of Hull House Women of Hull House is a portrait of some of the most influential women of Hull House, a pioneering settlement house founded in 1889 in Chicago. The group portrait depicts co-founders, Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Star, Julia Lathrop, a children’s rights activist, Florence Kelley, a labor reformer, Alice Hamilton, an occupational and public health specialist, and Mary Rozet Smith, a philanthropist. These women shaped the social reform movement and the United States in the early 20th century.
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Lowell Female Labor Reform Association The Lowell Female Labor Reform Association (LFLRA) is a portrait of the president, founding member and labor activist, Sarah Bagley. The LFLRA was founded in 1845 to advance female textile workers labor rights in Lowell, Massachusetts. The LFLRA was one of the first unions of working women in the United States.
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Collar Laundry Union Collar Laundry Union is a portrait of the first all female union in the United States, established by Irish immigrant, Kate Mullany in 1864. |
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Union Maids Union Maids is based off a 1973 oral history documentary film of the same name about Kate Hyndman, Stella Nowicki and Sylvia Woods, activists who fought for labor rights starting in 1930’s.
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Guerilla Girls: Frida Kahlo |
Guerilla Girls: Kathe Kollowitz
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The Edenton Tea Party The Edenton Tea Party is a group portrait of the Edenton, North Carolina women who penned a resolution to boycott English goods on October 25, 1774 in response to the British Tea Act of 1773.
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The Anti-Slavery Alphabet Mary Townsend (1814 - 1851) and her sister, Hannah Townsend (1812–1851), wrote and illustrated The Anti-Slavery Alphabet to educate young readers about human rights and raise social consciousness. The book was published by the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society (PFASS), a nationwide abolitionist organization in 1846.
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©
Maremi Hooff Andreozzi 2025 |
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