[{"id":140599197741,"handle":"for-the-bar","title":"Barware + Tableware","updated_at":"2024-08-19T15:40:11-04:00","body_html":"","published_at":"2019-08-20T12:48:39-04:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":true,"rules":[{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"For the Bar"},{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"For the Table"}],"published_scope":"global","image":{"created_at":"2022-04-23T06:27:04-04:00","alt":null,"width":3600,"height":2796,"src":"\/\/www.prospectny.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/2319b4f72d4f300a095a92646730ba99.jpg?v=1650709624"}},{"id":140598968365,"handle":"for-the-table","title":"For the Table","updated_at":"2024-08-19T15:40:11-04:00","body_html":"","published_at":"2019-08-20T12:48:39-04:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":true,"rules":[{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"For the Table"}],"published_scope":"global","image":{"created_at":"2022-04-23T06:27:15-04:00","alt":null,"width":3000,"height":1200,"src":"\/\/www.prospectny.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/f79f9f692cd56b561912bec263337573.jpg?v=1650709635"}},{"id":140825198637,"handle":"gifts","title":"Gifts","updated_at":"2024-08-19T15:40:11-04:00","body_html":"","published_at":"2019-08-22T09:23:44-04:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":false,"rules":[{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"Gifts"}],"published_scope":"global","image":{"created_at":"2022-04-23T06:27:27-04:00","alt":null,"width":2000,"height":1333,"src":"\/\/www.prospectny.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/02e59ec8ca61c654636d4fbca0eecb24.jpg?v=1650709647"}},{"id":152587108397,"handle":"hammer-museum","title":"Hammer Museum","updated_at":"2024-04-17T09:13:14-04:00","body_html":"The Hammer Museum champions art and artists that challenge us to see the world in a new light, to experience the unexpected, to ignite our imaginations, and inspire change. Through wide-ranging, international exhibitions and programming —including lectures, symposia, film series, readings, and musical performances -- the Hammer has highlighted contemporary art since the 1960s, especially the work of emerging and under-recognized artists. Prospect collaborated with the Hammer to produce a limited edition linen napkin by Judy Chicago depicting her work Rejection Fantasy (from the Rejection Quintet 1974), exclusively made for the museum’s annual Gala in the Garden which honored the artist.\u003ci\u003e \u003c\/i\u003e","published_at":"2019-10-15T11:52:51-04:00","sort_order":"best-selling","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":false,"rules":[{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"Hammer"}],"published_scope":"global"},{"id":75979489325,"handle":"frontpage","updated_at":"2024-07-30T17:10:03-04:00","published_at":"2019-02-25T20:41:35-05:00","sort_order":"best-selling","template_suffix":null,"published_scope":"global","title":"Home page","body_html":null},{"id":77717569581,"handle":"judy-chicago","title":"Judy Chicago","updated_at":"2024-07-29T14:15:05-04:00","body_html":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eThe Trailblazer.\u003c\/strong\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e\n\u003cp\u003eYou may know her as a key player in the feminist movement, but Judy Chicago is much, much more. Think innovators and early adopters – then go one step earlier, and you’ll find Chicago. She is a pioneer who sees art as language. And like any language, she believes art can be learned, it must be used and maintained, and it must evolve. Chicago is an artist, author of 14 books, and educator whose work shouts out for women’s rights to freedom of expression. She founded a feminist art and art education program in California in the early 1970s, then created ‘The Dinner Party’: an epic installation now housed at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at New York’s Brooklyn Museum. From 1974 to 1979, she painstakingly arranged the 39 place settings that make up the artwork – places for prehistoric goddesses, women in Christianity and the Reformation, and early revolutionaries such as Virginia Woolf and Georgia O’Keeffe. It’s the ultimate can’t-miss dinner party, and Judy Chicago is the ultimate powerhouse host.\u003c\/p\u003e","published_at":"2019-03-27T17:06:55-04:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"artist","disjunctive":false,"rules":[{"column":"vendor","relation":"equals","condition":"Judy Chicago"}],"published_scope":"global","image":{"created_at":"2022-04-23T06:27:46-04:00","alt":null,"width":2048,"height":526,"src":"\/\/www.prospectny.com\/cdn\/shop\/collections\/4104faf52ed4c72ae367f11344e0bcac.png?v=1650709666"}},{"id":415200215278,"handle":"more-by-judy-chicago","title":"MORE BY JUDY CHICAGO","updated_at":"2024-07-29T14:15:05-04:00","body_html":"","published_at":"2023-03-03T05:14:04-05:00","sort_order":"manual","template_suffix":"","disjunctive":true,"rules":[{"column":"tag","relation":"equals","condition":"Judy Chicago"}],"published_scope":"global"}]
["all","For the Table","Gifts","Hammer","homewares","Judy Chicago","New"]
This napkin is modeled from the artist’s Rejection Fantasy (from the Rejection Quintet 1974) drawing and was exclusively made for the Hammer Museum’s Annual Gala in the Garden which honored Judy Chicago. This work is one of five drawings in which Judy Chicago breaks through her earlier, more formal imagery to return to her iconic butterfly form. The butterfly was an early symbol of the Goddess and became a metaphor for the historic struggle for liberation represented by The Dinner Party (1974-1979).
Made in Turkey
Artist
Judy Chicago
Work
Rejection Fantasy (from the Rejection Quintet 1974)
Size
19"x19"
About Judy Chicago
The Trailblazer.
You may know her as a key player in the feminist movement, but Judy Chicago is much, much more. Think innovators and early adopters – then go one step earlier, and you’ll find Chicago. She is a pioneer who sees art as language. And like any language, she believes art can be learned, it must be used and maintained, and it must evolve. Chicago is an artist, author of 14 books, and educator whose work shouts out for women’s rights to freedom of expression. She founded a feminist art and art education program in California in the early 1970s, then created ‘The Dinner Party’: an epic installation now housed at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art at New York’s Brooklyn Museum. From 1974 to 1979, she painstakingly arranged the 39 place settings that make up the artwork – places for prehistoric goddesses, women in Christianity and the Reformation, and early revolutionaries such as Virginia Woolf and Georgia O’Keeffe. It’s the ultimate can’t-miss dinner party, and Judy Chicago is the ultimate powerhouse host.
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