Rachel Lachowicz
American, 1964
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Rachel is known for turning her witty eye on the masculine-centric world of Modernism and for making radical incursions into the canon of art history by reconfiguring famous works. She falls under a multitude of headings: feminist, appropriationist, post minimalist, conceptual artist, and conceptual sculptor. Labels aside, her work contributed to a ground-breaking reconceptualization of the feminist position.
The term “Lipstick Feminist,” grew out of an 80’s-90’s philosophy but more specifically the art world came to use that term to refer to the work of Rachel Lachowicz, and less than a handful of others. She explores the relationship of identity and the politics of mark making, predominately through the use of cosmetics. Lachowicz makes both discreet objects and large-scale installations that are visually lush (at times sexually provocative) and always with a deliberate repurposing of meaning.
Rachel is the chair of the Art Department at Claremont Graduate University, has over 20 years of teaching experience at the graduate level, and her lecture résumé is extensive. For 12 years she was a Santa Monica Arts Commissioner, and served on the board of the Santa Monica Arts Foundation and was a member of the Santa Monica Public Art Committee.
Courtesy of Rachel Lachowicz
Courtesy Claremont Graduate University