El Tendedero Indiana Collection

Elementos de identidade

Código de referência

US M023

Nome e localização da entidade custodiadora

Nível de descrição

Coleção

Título

El Tendedero Indiana Collection

Data(s)

  • circa 2009-2020 (Produção)

Dimensão

1 linear foot (1 postcard-size box and 3 oversize posters); 1.8 GB digital files

Nome do produtor

(1954-)

História biográfica

Monica Mayer (b. 1954) is a Mexican-born artist, educator, and activist. Mayer initially received training in visual art at the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. She is best known for public actions and installation artworks, but the artist also produced collages, drawings, and published books and essays. Mayer’s work exists within a tradition of installation art, performance, and political intervention identified by Mexican theorist Juan Acha as no-objectualismo or non-objectual art. No-objectualismo is associated with international conceptual art movements like Situationism, Happenings in New York and other cities, and the work of Japanese groups like Gutai and Group Ultra Niigata, but arises from socio-political and critical contexts particular to Mexico and Latin America. The movement was best represented by the work of avant-garde performance and conceptual art groups known collectively as Los Grupos and pursued individually by members of Los Grupos and by artists like Mayer. From the 1970s onward, Mayer was also involved in feminist artmaking and advocacy through her participation in groups like Movimiento Feminista Mexicano, the Coalición de Mujeres Feministas, and Collectivo Cine Mujeres. Mobilized in part by the United Nations International Women’s Year, the main conference of which was held in Mexico City in 1975, Mayer began staging art installations with more explicit feminist rhetoric. Mayer continued to explore the role of art in the feminist political project during a two-year program at the Feminist Studio Workshop in Los Angeles’ Women’s Building, an interdisciplinary center for feminist art practices founded by Judy Chicago, Arlene Raven, and Sheila Levrant de Bretteville, during which she made return trips to Mexico in order to lead workshops for women artists. In 1980, Mayer completed a master’s degree in the sociology of art at Goddard College in Vermont. Her thesis on the importance of feminist art as a tool for political organizing drew heavily from her work in Los Angeles. In 1983, Monica Mayer partner with Maris Bustamente, a long-time Mexican conceptual artist and member of the avant-garde performance art group No Grupo, to form Polvo de Gallina Negra (or Black Hen Powder), the first of Los Grupos to include the advancement of women’s issues in it’s stated mission. Polvo de Gallina Negra staged political interventions, media appearances, and conceptual works from 1983 to 1999. Mayer is perhaps best known for a serial installation piece known as El Tendedero (the Clothesline). El Tendedero was first staged at the Museo de Arte Moderno in Mexico City in 1978. For El Tendedero, Mayer solicits responses to a series of questions from women in local communities (e.g. “As a woman, have you ever experienced violence or harassment?” or “Do you feel safe as a woman in your city?”), and displays the responses en masse hanging from a clothesline to raise awareness of the frequency of gendered violence and harassment in different cities. The artwork has been reactivated several times since Mayer’s relocation to the United States in 1978, including at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in 2017-8 and, most recently, at locations around Indianapolis in 2020.

Nome do produtor

(2016-)

História administrativa

Women4Change Indiana is an inclusive, non-partisan, grassroots organization that promotes the health, safety, and respect of all Hoosiers. The organization is based in Indianapolis and was created in the aftermath of the 2016 presidential election.

Elementos de conteúdo e estrutura

Âmbito e conteúdo

The El Tendedero Indiana collection consists of one post-card sized box of community-generated response ballots to survey questions generated by Mayer. The ballots are separated into five subseries corresponding to five questions and further arranged by language (English and Spanish). The collection also includes one folder with printed ephemera and posters generated in advance of El Tendedero events around Indianapolis and an issue of the Indianapolis Recorder featuring a story about Women4Change legislative efforts. The El Tendedero Indiana collection was received with three oversize posters, a promotional t-shirt, and two red cardboard boxes which were used in the collection of community-generated response ballots; these have been (will be) photographed and deaccessioned. The collection also contains 1.8 GB digital material including digital ephemera, promotional material, and events photographs contributed by Women4Change and undated photographic documentation of past El Tendedero installations contributed by Mayer.

Sistema de arranjo

Arranged by topic and language.

Condições de acesso e uso dos elementos

Condições de acesso

The El Tendedero Indiana collection was digitized and will be made available through the collection website. Physical collections are retained by the museum and will be made available to researchers at the discretion of the archivist. The photographs from past installations in series three are available upon advance request.

Acesso físico

Acesso técnico

Condiçoes de reprodução

Unpublished manuscripts are protected by copyright. Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be secured from the repository and the copyright holder.  Please contact the Archivist for more information.

Idiomas do material

  • inglês
  • espanhol

Escrita do material

    Notas ao idioma e script

    Instrumentos de descrição

    Elementos de aquisição e avaliação

    História custodial

    Analog materials from the El Tendedero Indiana Collection were transferred to Newfields on September 29, 2020. Additional materials were received on November 6, 2020 and November 9, 2020. Born digital collections material was transferred from Mayer on November 11, 2020, and from Women4Change on December 17, 2020.

    Fonte imediata de aquisição

    Gift of Women4Change Indiana

    Informações de avaliação, seleção e eliminação

    Incorporações

    Elementos de materiais relacionados

    Existência e localização de originais

    Existência e localização de cópias

    Material arquivístico relacionado

    Descrições relacionadas

    Elemento de notas

    Notas especializadas

    • Citação: [Title of item], [date], [Container information], El Tendedero Indiana Collection (M023), Archives, Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, Indianapolis, IN.

    Identificador(es) alternativo(s)

    Elemento de controle de descrição

    Regras ou convenções

    Describing Archives: A Content Standard

    Fontes utilizadas

    Nota do arquivista

    Processed by Ethan Miller, Project Archivist, October 26, 2021. Finding aid completed by Anastasia Karel, Archivist, 2022.

    Pontos de acesso

    Pontos de acesso - Locais

    Pontos de acesso - Nomes

    Área de ingresso