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Course name
Global Feminist Art
Institution
University of Washington
Instructor
Sasha Welland
Subject
Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies and Anthropology
Course dates
2015-03-30 – 2015-06-12
Approximate number of student editors
120


This course "introduces feminism as a way of thinking about visual art practice in terms of social hierarchy, aesthetic form, and ideology. Explores how feminist artists working in diverse locations and cultural traditions challenge, at the local and global level, artistic conventions and representations of gender, sexuality, race, class, and nationality."

For our Wikipedia project, students will be identifying Wikipedia gaps and providing documentation to help fill them. Students will think critically about how Wikipedia in its current formation structurally limits knowledge about feminism and art, and then to contribute to changing this situation.

Each student will identify a gap in Wikipedia coverage for a course-related topic — such an artist, topic, concept, or movement. The student will then post an entry to the course project page to describe the gap, propose text to fill the gap, and list sources that could be used to fill it.


Wikipedia Gap Analysis[edit]

Assignment (due May 14, 2015)
  1. Create a user account on Wikipedia and enroll in this course page.
  2. Complete the first two modules (Welcome and The Core) of the Wikipedia Training for Students. Also review in more detail Wikipedia's guidelines on identifying reliable sources and on notability (which describes the requirements for a topic to have its own article).
  3. Identify a course-related artist, topic, concept, or movement. You can begin with material discussed in class but are also encouraged to move beyond it, following your own interests. Check out, for example:
    • additional books of interest on reserve for the course (see syllabus for titles)
    • links provided on the course website
    • Art + Feminism’s Additional Resources: http://art.plusfeminism.org/resources/more
    • the journal n.paradox: international feminist art journal (a subscription for the UW Library has been ordered)
    • Wikipedia’s Category for "Feminism and the arts": Category:Feminism and the arts
  4. Search Wikipedia for coverage of your selected topic. What do you find? Can you identify any gaps? (If not, you may want to think about another topic. Give yourself some time to explore a variety of ideas.) Examples of Wikipedia article gaps:
    • Artists: There is no page for the artist you are interested in; the information on the page is sparse or limited; there aren’t links in the article to movements or forms of art they contributed to; there is a link to male artists they were in conversation with, but not vice versa.
    • Media and Movements: The media (e.g. performance art) or the movement (e.g. British Black Arts Movement) does not include significant or relevant feminist artists, events, works, or concepts; there are missing links between artist and movement articles.
    • Ideological gaps: As recently as 2013, Male novelists were are categorized as “American novelists,” whereas female novelists are listed under the subcategory of “American women Novelists” with no equivalent subcategory of “American Men Novelists.” See: this New York Times story and the ensuing discussions on Wikipedia about how to categorize novelists here and here.
  5. Once you have identified a gap, write a paragraph (approx. 250 words) that documents this gap, describes how you found it, and analyzes how this gap limits knowledge or structures it in a particular way along axes of power such as gender, sexuality, race, class, nationality, etc.
  6. Think about how you would fill this gap and research at least five reliable sources as defined by the Wikipedia community. Working from these resources, write at least one paragraph (approx. 250 words) that provides new content to fill the gap. This paragraph can take different forms. It can be the beginning of a new article for an artist or movement not currently represented in Wikipedia. It can be an addition to a pre-existing article. Or it can be a proposed rewrite of a pre-existing article section, in which case you will want to post the current version along with your rewritten version.
  7. Document your sources according to Wikipedia conventions on citing sources. If they are online sources, please hyperlink them.
  8. Type in the topic of the gap you identified, click "Submit Gap Analysis", add your answers, then click "Save page" to submit your response.

  1. Go to your Contributions page and find your Global Feminist Art gap analysis edit in the list of contributions. Click the "diff" link for that edit, which should show what you added as your gap analysis. Copy that "diff" URL to submit to Canvas.

Jessica "Jessy" Park Autistic Artist

There is a brief reference to Park on the Autistic Artist Wiki page, but the page in general is greatly lacking representation from the field of autistic artists.

Jessica Park, born in Williamstown MA on July 20, 1958, a primarily self-taught artist. Autism Spectrum Disorder is often diagnosed by the individual’s level of social impairment and their verbal interactions (1) both of which Park exhibited in her early life. Her mother, Clara Claiborne Park, described Park’s early years as a state of Nirvana because Park would lapses into states of timelessness and become singularly enrapt by nothingness (6). Clara Park became a social advocate for Park, published two books The Siege: A Family’s Journey Into the World of an Autistic Child (1982) and Exiting Nirvana: A Daughter’s Life with Autism (2002)(5).At the age of five Park began learning verbal speech by being shown series of shapes and then learning drawing them, which soon enabled her to identify colors and led her to drawing in perspective before age eight (2)(6). Through out her career she has developed a focus on buildings and the colors she associates with geometric colors, reflecting on her fascination with shapes and perhaps her disassociation with people.

Autism in Western culture is often seen as a life limiting diagnosis, placing constraints on what an individual can accomplish and desire from life. Society is predominately neuro-typical and is constructed to fit the majority rather than embrace the continuity of human existence. Clara Park (The siege) rejected this philosophy while raising Park and encouraged her visual for of self-expression. Park’s artwork has been exhibited throughout New York City in different autism awareness exhibitions from 1993-Present, the United Nations in 2008, through out Boston from 1993-Present, and she is often exhibited at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (7).

References [1](1) [2](2) [3](3) [4](4) [5].(5) [6](6) [7](7)

  1. ^ Furniss, G. (n.d.). Reflections on the Historical Narrative of Jessica Park, an Artist With Autism. Art Therapy, 190-194.
  2. ^ http://www.berkshireeagle.com/berkshiresweek/ci_21953816
  3. ^ http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,105619,00.html
  4. ^ Long, N., & Moore, H. (2013). The social life of achievement (Vol. 2). Berghahn Books.
  5. ^ Bickerton, D. (2001, March 11). Interiors. New York Times.
  6. ^ Park, C. (1982). The siege: A family's journey into the world of an autistic child. Boston: Little, Brown and.
  7. ^ Gengarelly, T. (n.d.). The Jessica Park Project. Retrieved May 14, 2015, from http://www.mcla.edu/JessicaPark/