Formed in New York in the mid 1980s, Guerrilla Girls' members protect their identities by wearing gorilla masks in public and by assuming pseudonyms taken from deceased female figures.
Guerrilla Girls
The Guerrilla Girls are a group of anonymous American female artists who seek to expose sexual and racial discrimination in the art world and the wider cultural arena
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Who are the Guerrilla Girls?
Discover more about the all female collective and their art
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Turn left for the revolution
When Jacques-Louis David allowed his famous painting The Death of Marat 1793–4 to be used in support of the Republican cause in France, he changed the meaning and power of the image forever. Since then artists’ left-wing political values have variously influenced the making of art and visual culture, from William Morris’s emphasis on hand-production values to the anonymously designed Atelier Populaire posters of 1968. To coincide with Tate Liverpool’s ground-breaking exhibition Art Turning Left: How Values Changed Making – the first to explore the impact of the Left on the production and reception of art from the French Revolution to the present day – writer Hari Kunzru charts the rich mix of artist voices and ideas across the centuries
Selected artworks in the collection
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Guerrilla Girls Dearest Art Collector
1986 -
Guerrilla Girls Women Artists In The Andy Warhol And Tremaine Auctions At Sotheby’s
1989 -
Guerrilla Girls Guerrilla Girls Review The Whitney
1987
Guerrilla Girls at Tate
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Tate Liverpool
Exhibition
Art Turning Left: How Values Changed Making 1789–2013
8 Nov 2013 – 2 Feb 2014Tate Liverpool's Art Turning Left is the first exhibition to examine how the production and reception of art has been influenced by left-wing political values, from the French Revolution to the present day.