V&A celebrates 125 years of women printmakers in free exhibition
Briefly

V&A celebrates 125 years of women printmakers in free exhibition
"Although often overlooked, women have played a significant role in the printing trade since its earliest days. To celebrate this long and frequently underestimated heritage, the V&A has brought together 25 remarkable printmakers whose work spans the past 125 years. Freed from any thematic or stylistic constraints - beyond gender and timeframe - the exhibition presents a wildly diverse range of printed works. The result is a broad and engaging survey, from art used as ammunition in political struggle to pieces created for beauty, storytelling,"
"Among the most pointed exhibits is a protest banner by the Guerrilla Girls, who expose inequality within the art world: despite women accounting for 85% of the nudes in the Met Museum's Modern Art collection, only 5% of the artists represented are women. It is an especially fitting inclusion for a museum display interrogating artistic history. Elsewhere, a 1932 lithograph by Pearl Binder depicting theatrical costumiers feels unexpectedly contemporary."
"The exhibition champions the women artists who were commissioned by London Transport's Frank Pick - with some examples of posters to promote travel designed by Dora Batty. At a time when female artists were still looked down on, over a quarter of London Underground posters came from the female hand. The exhibition also embraces the form in unexpected ways, including Lynne Allen's sculptural 3D printed moccasins, which blur the boundary between object, craft, and print."
The V&A presents Lasting Impressions: Women Printmakers 1900–Now, showcasing work by 25 women printmakers spanning 125 years. The display imposes only gender and timeframe, resulting in a diverse array of prints from political protest to decorative, narrative, and personal works. Highlights include a Guerrilla Girls protest banner exposing gender inequality in museum collections and a 1932 Pearl Binder lithograph whose subject reads as unexpectedly modern. The show features London Transport commissions by female designers such as Dora Batty and experimental works like Lynne Allen’s 3D-printed moccasins. Admission is free until September 2026.
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