The Guerrilla Girls
The women who fought sexism and racism in the 1980s art world, plus Pluto is downgraded and the revolutionary sign language of the 1970s.
In 1985 a group of anonymous female artists in New York began dressing up with gorilla masks on their heads and putting up fly-posters around the city's museums and galleries. We hear from two of the original Guerrilla Girls, who launched a campaign to demand greater representation for women and minorities in the art world. Also on the programme, the rarely heard voices of Africans who were forced to take sides in WW1; how Pluto lost its status as a planet, the invention of a revolutionary sign language, Makaton, in the 1970s, and changing 20th century theories of child rearing.
PHOTO: Some of the Guerrilla Girls in 1990 (Getty Images)
Last on
More episodes
Broadcasts
- Sat 14 Nov 2020 14:06GMT成人快手 World Service News Internet
- Tue 17 Nov 2020 00:06GMT成人快手 World Service
Podcast
-
The History Hour
A compilation of the latest Witness History programmes