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dc.contributor.advisorMurphy, Gavin
dc.contributor.authorO’Mahony, Sarah Ann
dc.date.accessioned2022-06-29T01:09:41Z
dc.date.available2022-06-29T01:09:41Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.identifier.citationO’MAHONY, S.A., 2011. In search of a language textile and text in contemporary women's art. Unpublished Thesis (Degree of Doctor of Philosphy in Art History), Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology
dc.identifier.otherPHD
dc.identifier.urihttp://research.thea.ie/handle/20.500.12065/4000
dc.description.abstractThis research uses the textile/text axis concept as a conceptual tool to investigate the role of textile and text in contemporary women’s art practice and theorizing, investigating textile as a largely hitherto unacknowledged element in women’s art practice of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Textile and text share a common etymological root, from the Latin textere to weave, textus a fabric. The thesis illuminates the pathways whereby textile and text played an important role in women reclaiming a speaking voice as creators of culture and signification during a revolutionary period of renewal in women’s cultural contribution and positioning. The methodological approach used in the research consisted of a comprehensive literature review, the compilation of an inventory of relevant women artists, developing a classificatory system differentiating types of approaches, concerns and concepts underpinning women’s art practice vis a vis the textile/text axis and a series of three in-depth case studies of artists Tracey Emin, Louise Bourgeois and Faith Ringgold. The thesis points to the fact that contemporary women artists and theorists have rounded their art practice and aesthetic discourse in textile as prime visual metaphor and signifier, turning towards the ancient language of textile not merely to reclaim a speaking voice but to occupy a ground breaking locus of signification and representation in contemporary culture. The textile/text axis facilitated women artists in powerfully countering a culturally inscribed status of Lacanian ‘no-woman’ (a position of abjection, absence and lack in the phallocentric symbolic). Turning towards a language of aeons, textile as fertile wellspring, the thesis identifies the methodologies and strategies whereby women artists have inserted their webs of subjectivities and deepest concerns into the records and discourses of contemporary culture. Presenting an anatomy of the textile/text axis, the thesis identifies nine component elements manifesting in contemporary women’s aesthetic practice and discourse. In this cultural renaissance, the textile/text axis, the thesis suggests, served as a complex lexicon, a system of labyrinthine references and signification, a site of layered meanings and ambiguities, a body proxy and a corporeal cartography, facilitating a revolution in women’s aesthetic praxis.
dc.subjectTextile crafts
dc.subjectTextile, 20th century
dc.subjectTextile, 21st century
dc.subjectEmin, Tracey
dc.subjectBourgeois, Louise
dc.subjectRinggold, Faith
dc.subjectContemporary art, Ireland
dc.subjectArt, Modern, Ireland
dc.subjectWomen artists, Ireland
dc.subjectWomen in art, Ireland
dc.titleIn search of a language textile and text in contemporary women's art
dc.typeDoctoral Thesis
dc.publisher.institutionGalway-Mayo Institute of Technologyen
dc.rights.accessCreative Commons
dc.subject.departmentCentre for the Creative Arts & Media - GMIT


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