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Nancy Spero papers

Archives of American Art

Object Details

Creator
Spero, Nancy, 1926-2009
Names
A.I.R. Gallery (New York, N.Y.)
Galerie Lelong (New York, N.Y.)
Golub, Leon, 1922-2004
Mendieta, Ana, 1948-1985
Sosa, Irene
Occupation
Printmakers -- New York (State) -- New York
Painters -- New York (State) -- New York
Collagists -- New York (State) -- New York
Topic
Art -- Political aspects
Feminism and art
Women artists
Women printmakers
Women painters
Provenance
Following a gift of materials by Nancy Spero in 1979, the majority of the collection was donated by Spero's sons, Stephen Golub, Philip Golub, and Paul Golub, in 2013.
Creator
Spero, Nancy, 1926-2009
See more items in
Nancy Spero papers
Sponsor
Funding for the processing of this collection was provided by The Walton Family Foundation. Funding for the digitization of the collection was provided by the Smithsonian American Women's History Initiative.
Summary
The papers of painter, collage artist, and printmaker Nancy Spero measure 26.4 linear feet and 19.12 GB and are dated 1940s-2009. Biographical material, correspondence and other files documenting Spero's personal and professional relationships, interviews and writings, records of Spero's many exhibitions and projects, files highlighting the major subjects that galvanized her, business records, printed and photographic material, and digital and video recordings, offer detailed insight into the career of one of the earliest feminist artists.
Biographical / Historical
Nancy Spero (1926-2009) was a figurative painter, printmaker, and collage artist based in New York City whose work was executed primarily on paper from the 1960s on, and often incorporated text. Spero was among the first feminist artists and a political activist whose convictions were expressed relentlessly in her work. Using archetypal representations of women to examine the range of female experience, Spero centered "woman as protagonist" whilst simultaneously examining the suffering women have long been subjected to through structural inequality, the systematic abuses of repressive political regimes, and the atrocities of war. Born in Cleveland, Nancy Spero lived in Chicago from the time she was a very young child until completing her studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (BFA 1949) where she met her future husband, painter Leon Golub (1922-2004). Spero studied briefly in Paris and lived in New York City, returning to Chicago after her marriage in 1951. The couple and their two sons lived in Italy from 1956 to 1957. In 1959, after a few years in New York, the family moved to Paris where Spero developed an interest in existentialism and produced a series of black paintings. Spero and Golub returned to New York in 1964 with their three sons. Nancy Spero was strongly affected by the war in Vietnam and the many social changes of the period. She became an activist and feminist, joined various organizations, and participated in a variety of demonstrations. Work such as the War series began to include political and sexual imagery, and Spero's work from here on was primarily executed on paper. Spero was among the founding members of the women's cooperative A.I.R. Gallery established in 1972. In the 1970s archetypal representations of women in mythology, history, art, and literature became predominant in her work. Included in this vein are major series and installations, among them Torture of Women, Notes in Time on Women, The First Language, and her 66th Street/Lincoln Center subway station mosaic mural Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Spero exhibited in the 1950 Salon des Independents and her first solo exhibition (in tandem with Leon Golub) was held at Indiana University in 1958. Thereafter, she showed sporadically until nearly 30 years later when her career flourished and she enjoyed international stature. Beginning in 1986, each year brought multiple solo exhibitions at galleries and museums in the United States and internationally. In addition, she continued to participate in group shows such as "Documenta" and the Venice Biennale. Her work is included in the permanent collections of museums throughout the world. Awards and honors included the Skowhegan Medal for Works on Paper (1995), Hiroshima Art Prize shared with Leon Golub (1996), The Women's Caucus for Art award for Outstanding Achievement in Visual Arts (2003), and The Women's Caucus for Art Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement (2005). Spero was awarded honorary Doctorates of Fine Arts by The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1991) and Williams College (2001), and was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters (2006). After several years of declining health, Nancy Spero died from heart failure in New York City, October 18, 2009.
Extent
26.4 Linear feet
19.12 Gigabytes
Date
1940s-2009
Archival Repository
Archives of American Art
Identifier
AAA.spernanc
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Gigabytes
Sound recordings
Interviews
Video recordings
Documentary films
Motion pictures
Citation
Nancy Spero papers, 1940s-2009. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged as 11 series: Series 1: Biographical Material, 1950-2009 (Box 1, FC 30; 0.85 linear feet, ER01-ER04; 9.58 GB) Series 2: Correspondence, 1946-2009 (Boxes 1-4, 27; 2.75 linear feet) Series 3: Interviews, 1973-2007 (Boxes 4-5; 0.6 linear feet) Series 4: Writings, 1950-2007 (Boxes 5-6; 1 linear foot) Series 5: Exhibition Files, circa 1976-2009 (Boxes 6-9, 27, OV 28; 3.3 linear feet, ER09-ER10, ER14-ER17; 1.5 GB) Series 6: Gallery and Museum Files, 1972-2009 (Boxes 9-14; 5.1 linear feet; ER05-ER08, ER12-ER13; 2.962 GB) Series 7: Professional Files, circa 1967-2008 (Boxes 14-17, RD 29; 3.5 linear feet; ER15; 0.74 GB) Series 8: Subject Files, 1950s-2009 (Boxes 17-19, 27, OV 28; 2.4 linear feet) Series 9: Business Records, circa 1976-2008 (Boxes 19-20; 0.7 linear foot) Series 10: Printed Material, 1949-2009 (Boxes 20-25, 27, OV 28; 5.5 linear feet) Series 11: Photographic Material, 1940s-2009 (Boxes 25-27; 0.7 linear foot; ER18-ER19; 0.151 GB)
Processing Information
The collection was processed to a minimal level and a finding aid prepared in 2014 by Catherine S. Gaines. The collection was further processed and the finding aid was updated by Stephanie Ashley in 2021-2022 with funding provided by The Walton Family Foundation. The collection was digitized in 2022 with funding provided by the American Women's History Initiative. Motion picture film reel was inspected and re-housed in 2016 with funding provided by the Smithsonian Collections Care and Preservation Fund. Born-digital materials were processed by Kirsi Ritosalmi-Kisner in 2019 with funding provided by Smithsonian Collection Care and Preservation Fund.
Rights
The Archives of American Art makes its archival collections available for non-commercial, educational and personal use unless restricted by copyright and/or donor restrictions, including but not limited to access and publication restrictions. AAA makes no representations concerning such rights and restrictions and it is the user's responsibility to determine whether rights or restrictions exist and to obtain any necessary permission to access, use, reproduce and publish the collections. Please refer to the Smithsonian's Terms of Use for additional information.
Genre/Form
Sound recordings
Interviews
Video recordings
Documentary films
Motion pictures
Scope and Contents
The papers of painter, collage artist, and printmaker Nancy Spero measure 26.4 linear feet and 19.12 GB and are dated 1940s-2009. Biographical material, correspondence and other files documenting Spero's personal and professional relationships, interviews and writings, records of Spero's many exhibitions and projects, files highlighting the major subjects that galvanized her, business records, printed and photographic material, and digital and video recordings, offer detailed insight into the career of one of the earliest feminist artists. Biographical material includes biographical notes and curricula vitae, as well as several video recordings of documentaries about Spero by Patsy Scala and Irene Sosa which feature original footage of Spero at work. Correspondence is personal and professional, and includes letters from artists including Judy Chicago and Ana Mendieta, writers and curators such as Deborah Frizzell and Susanne Altmann, regarding Spero exhibition catalogs, monographs, and articles, and personal news from family members such as Spero's sons, and correspondence related to other aspects of Spero's career. Interviews of Spero include transcripts, published interviews, and video recordings. Writings include many of Spero's statements about her work, as well as notes, published versions of articles written by Spero, and video recordings of talks and panel discussions she participated in. Exhibition files for over 75 shows document the extent to which Spero's work has been widely exhibited in her lifetime with numerous solo exhibitions, including major retrospectives in London, Paris, Barcelona, and Madrid, and dozens of group exhibitions in which she participated over the course of her career. Gallery and museum files supplement the exhibition files by further documenting Spero's dealings with numerous galleries and museums, including Galerie Lelong, which represents Spero's estate, Barbara Gross Galerie, the first gallery in Germany to represent Spero, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the National Gallery of Canada, and many others. The series also documents Spero's involvement with A.I.R. Gallery, the first independent women's art venue in the United States. Professional files document other aspects of Spero's career including, but not limited to, awards she received, organizations she participated in or contributed to, publishing projects related to her work, and individual projects she executed such as an installation at the Harold Washington Library in Chicago and the Artemis, Acrobats, Divas & Dancers mosaic tiles she created for the Metropolitan Transit Authority for the 66th Street/Lincoln Center subway station. Also included here are files related to works of art such as Codex Artaud, and Notes in Time. Subject files, contents of which were presumably used as source material for Spero, document subjects of interest to her, many of which were incorporated into her work and consists primarily of printed material. Broad subject categories include animal rights and conservation, feminism, war, and women. One set of folders documents "museum and political actions" undertaken by Spero and other activists during the 1960s-1970s to fight for equal representation of women in the arts and challenge the male-dominated hierarchy of the art world. Subject files include multiple news articles on torture, rape, and other atrocities committed particularly against women during wartime and by repressive and autocratic political regimes, and also include source material on the archetypal images of women that were fundamental to her interpretation of the female experience. Printed material documents Spero's entire career from the late 1950s on. Announcements, exhibition catalogs, invitations, news clippings, and periodicals provide comprehensive coverage of her many exhibitions and other events. Printed material also documents the activities of a few other artists, primarily from the 2000s, and includes periodicals, primarily about art, and video recordings of documentaries about art and various other subjects. Photographic material includes photographs of Nancy Spero from the 1940s on, photos of Spero with family and friends, and photographs of artwork including the heads of Spero's 2007 Maypole: Take No Prisoners which was the last major work completed before her death, originally realized for the Venice Biennale. Also found are a few installation shots and prints, slides, and digital images of Notes in Time at A.I.R. Gallery in 1979.
Restrictions
This collection is open for research. Access to original papers requires an appointment and is limited to the Archives' Washington, D.C. Research Center. Researchers interested in accessing born-digital records or audiovisual recordings in this collection must use access copies. Contact References Services for more information.
Related Materials
Also among the holdings of the Archives of American Art are an interview with Nancy Spero conducted 2008 Februay 6-July 24, by Judith Olch Richards, and the papers of Spero's husband, Leon Golub.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503511487370-1503511487382-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/mw9ee586015-b282-427f-88a2-0768b0b0e79b

In the Collection

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  • Statements

  • Miscellaneous, Unidentified

  • Feldman, Janet

  • Nancy Spero: Works 1954-1986 (1987 March-April), Institute of Contemporary Art, London

  • Zucker, Barbara

  • Electronic resourceNancy Spero Talk with Robert Storr and Book Signing Event

  • MTA Project for Lincoln Center Subway Station, Contracts and Correspondence

  • September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks

  • First Names Only

  • Nielsen Gallery

  • Catalogs, Group Exhibitions

  • Electronic resourceJon Bird Interviews Nancy Spero at ICA London

  • Women, Images

  • Maypole: Take No Prisoners Heads, Caca

  • Siglio Press, Torture of Women Book

  • Michael Rosenfeld Gallery

  • Electronic resourceKate Horsfield and Lyn Blumenthal Interview Nancy Spero for Video Data Bank

  • Josh Baer Gallery

  • Galerie Lelong

  • Willard Gallery

  • Nancy Spero: Dissidances (2008 July-September), MACBA, Maypole Redux, Oversized

  • Lovers XVII

  • Electronic resourceCity Arts TV Program, "Artists Space 25th Anniversary" Episode Segment

  • A.I.R. Gallery, Notes in Time on Women, Part II , Prints

  • Clippings, Oversized

  • Snug Harbor Cultural Center

  • Nancy Spero: Dissidances (2008 July-September), MACBA, Correspondence and Lists

  • Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Images

  • The Feminine Image (1996 November-1997 January), Nassau County Museum of Art

  • Gallery and Museum Files

  • Unidentified Exhibitions/Installations, Oversized

  • Notes

  • Obrist, Hans-Ulrich, Interview, Published Copy

  • Correspondence

  • Eshelman, Clayton

  • Sculpture--Figure--Woman (April-May 1998), Städistsche Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz

  • Installation at Von der Heydt-Museum, Wuppertal (1991)

  • Writings by Others

  • Talks and Visiting Artist Engagements

  • Spear, Duston, Oversized

  • Electronic resourceL'Envol Installation at the Centre Georges Pompidou

  • School of the Art Institute of Chicago

  • Catalogs, Group Exhibitions

  • Ba-Bl, General

  • Announcements and Invitations, Other Artists

  • Marianne Deson Gallery

  • Electronic resourceNancy Spero in the NYC Subway

  • Quotations and References

  • Kingsborough Community College

  • Unidentified Exhibitions/Installations

  • Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Art Prize Exhibition, Video Recordings of Installation Process

  • Jurgen Becker Galerie

  • Wayne State University, Elaine L. Jacob Gallery

  • Newman, Carol S.

  • Costantini, Giovanna

  • Women

  • True Grit: Seven Female Visionaries before Feminism (2001-2004),Traveling Exhibition

  • Electronic resourceCompilation and Video Anthology

  • IKON Gallery

  • Feminine-Masculine: The Sex of Art (1995 October-1996 February), Musée National d'Art Moderne/Centre Georges Pompidou, Video Recordings

  • About Spero, Unknown Authors

  • Electronic resourceMuseum of Fine Arts Boston, Video Recording, Site Visit for Koptos Gateway Banner

  • Museum of Modern Art, New York

  • Women

  • Rape

  • Clippings

  • A Sangra y Fuego: Representations of Violence in Contemporary Art (1999 October-December), Espai d'Art Contemporani de Castelló

  • Feminism, Oversized

  • Barbara Gross Galerie

  • Catalogs, Group Exhibitions

  • Dialogue with the Other (1994 June-September) Kunsthallen Brandts Klædefabrik, Denmark

  • Codex Artaud

  • Nancy Spero and Leon Golub in Salzburg, Austria

  • Catalogs, Solo Exhibitions

  • Announcements and Invitations, Solo Exhibitions

  • Golub Inventories, Paintings

  • Vancouver Art Gallery

  • Electronic resource"Leon Golub and Nancy Spero Exhibit at Hiroshima" and "On the Road"

  • Inventories, Available Works

  • Glen Ridge High School Rape Case

  • Women Artists

  • Walker, Joanna

  • Animal Rights and Conservation

  • Inventories, Artwork ("Quick Summary Golub/Spero")

  • Lawrence Oliver Gallery

  • Catalogs, Solo Exhibitions

  • Artists Space

  • Venice Biennale 52 (2007 June-November), Reviews

  • City Gallery of Contemporary Art

  • Barbara Gross Galerie

  • L, General

  • Aa-Arc, General

  • Liberation (2006 November-2007 January), Saigon Open City, Ho Chi Minh Fine Arts Museum

  • Christine König Galerie

  • Maypole: Take No Prisoners Heads, Riki- Yuksta, Untitled

  • Sheela Does Ramapo (2001 February-March), Ramapo College New Jersey, Catalog Essay by Susanne Altmann

  • Dumas, Marie Hèléne, L'Évidence

  • Barbara Gross Galerie

  • Women Artists, Oversized

  • Lippard, Lucy, Vietnam Exhibition

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Biographical Notes
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International media Interoperability Framework
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