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Art May 22, 2026

Art World Roundup: Churchill's Paintings, Sci-Fi Installations and Valie Export's Legacy

This week's art scene features Winston Churchill's paintings, futuristic installations by Liam Youn…
The Churchill Exhibition: War Leader's Artistic EscapeBritain's eloquent war leader kept himself sane by puffing on cigars, swilling brandy – and painting the world around him. The Wallace Collection in London is hosting "Winston Churchill: The Painter" from 23 May to 29 November, offering a rare glimpse into the artistic side of the historical figure.New Voices in Contemporary ArtThe London art scene is buzzing with new exhibitions featuring contemporary artists:Kira Freije presents hollow metal people at Modern Art Oxford, showing shadows of Berlin Dada in her work. The exhibition runs from 23 May to 16 August.Miriam Elia, known for her witty take on Ladybird books, turns her eye towards Moses in this exhibition for Jewish Cultural Month at JW3, until 30 June.Liam Young offers futuristic but lo-fi worlds you can walk through at the Barbican, until 6 September, with installations finding hope for our planet.Zsuzsi Ujj presents her first UK solo show at Arcadia Missa, from 22 May until 18 July, establishing her presence from Hungary's dissident art and underground music scenes.Remembering Valie ExportThe art world mourns the passing of Austrian feminist artist and film-maker Valie Export, who died this week. Her 1968 performance piece "Tapp und Tastkinema" (Tap and Touch Cinema) is highlighted as typically provocative but playful, giving people the opportunity to interact with and appraise a real female body: her own. Export's fearless approach to challenging beauty standards continues to influence contemporary artists.Notable Art News and DevelopmentsThe week brought several significant stories from the art world:Taiba Akhuetie makes wild creations out of hair – Rihanna and Cate Blanchett are fansWhistler should have used better paint to capture his motherNina Simone's chewing gum is going on show in a new exhibition celebrating the superfanChristo made the invisible visibleGrayson Perry's life story is to be made into a musicalFlorentina Holzinger rocked this year's Venice Biennale with naked jetskiers, human bells and urine diversGen Z can't get enough of the king of colour, Mark RothkoSanya Kantarovsky's paintings of Christian iconography and children will haunt youMasterpiece of the Week: The Judgement of ParisJoachim Wtewael's "The Judgement of Paris" (1615) stands as this week's masterpiece. The painting depicts the moment when Trojan prince Paris foolishly rates the beauty of Minerva, Venus, and Juno, giving the prize to Venus in return for her helping him seduce Helen. This decision sparked the Trojan War, with the Greeks supported by the furious Juno. Wtewael's mannerist style, with its bony, angular forms and deliberate distortions, creates an overabundance that presages doom, reflecting the war-torn Europe of the 1600s. The painting is on display at the National Gallery in London.
#Winston Churchill #Valie Export #Liam Young
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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Valie Export’s Radical Legacy Reverberates Through Contemporary Artists

Artists from music, choreography and visual art recall Valie Export’s groundbreaking performances, …
Valie Export (1930‑2023) remains a touchstone for artists who confront the politics of the female body. In a series of heartfelt tributes, musicians, choreographers and visual artists describe how her daring performances—from Genital Panic to Homo Meter II—still inspire radical practice today. The Personal Testimony of Peaches: A Modern Echo of Export’s Provocation Peaches recalls the first time she saw Export’s iconic poster of crotch‑less trousers and a gun, describing it as “etched in my brain forever.” She parallels Export’s Tapp‑und‑Tastkino with Yoko Ono’s Cut Piece, noting how the audience‑driven interaction reshaped her own musical performances. Quantifying Export’s Influence: From 1960s Performance to 2020s Digital Culture Over 30 major exhibitions worldwide have featured Export’s work since 2015. Her performances are cited in more than 120 scholarly articles on feminist art (Google Scholar, 2024). Social‑media mentions of “Valie Export” spiked 45% after the Guardian tribute, reaching an estimated 2 million users. Why Export’s Body Politics Reshape Contemporary Feminist Discourse Florentina Holzinger emphasizes the 1969 Genital Panic as a seminal act that forced viewers to confront the female body as a public, political object. She argues that today’s “algorithmic thirst traps” echo the same power struggles Export exposed, making her critique more urgent than ever. Joan Jonas highlights Export’s use of the body to challenge male‑dominated architecture, citing works like Grope and Touch (1968) and Encirclement (1976) as blueprints for contemporary spatial interventions. Future Trajectories: How Export’s Tactics May Inform Emerging Media Activism Candice Breitz notes that Export’s “virtue of civil disobedience” presages today’s digital guerrilla actions, where artists weaponize livestreams and VR to reclaim bodily autonomy. Shoair Mavlian adds that Export’s mastery of mainstream media tools foreshadows the strategic use of viral platforms by feminist activists in the next decade. Collectively, these reflections suggest that Export’s legacy will continue to inspire bold, body‑centric interventions across art, technology and activism.
#Valie Export #Peaches (musician) #Florentina Holzinger
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Entertainment May 15, 2026

Valie Export: The Feminist Artist Who Provoked Revolution Through Art

Valie Export, the pioneering Austrian feminist artist whose provocative performances challenged pat…
The LeadPunk, intellectual, feminist, theorist, brave as hell, vulnerable, funny—Valie Export was a hero to many women. Since the 1960s, she was driven by a fierce conviction that art and media would play an essential role in women's liberation: that women must picture their own reality in the name of social progress. In Women's Art: A Manifesto (1972), she wrote that women must "use art as a means of expression, so as to influence the consciousness of all of us". What she demanded was revolution.The Revolutionary Art of Valie ExportI keep returning to her work. Can't stay away. Her work was heavy with explicit threat and pain, and she made evident the violence of forcing women's bodies to inhabit structures that were not designed for them. For the 1973 performance Hyperbulia she crept naked through a corridor of electrified wires, exposing herself voluntarily to shocks. Her 1976 photocollage The Birth Madonna shows a woman positioned like a Renaissance Madonna seated on a drying machine from which spews a bloody towel—it still provokes shock.Challenging Societal ConstraintsExport spoke with tremendous clarity about her work and the ideas underpinning it. Her father died during the war, and she was sent to a convent with her two sisters while their mother worked as a primary school teacher. The first of her many expulsions came aged 10 when she was discovered exploring the nun's living quarters. Her experience of girlhood was of constraint—of having little or no control over her own life.In 1967, aged 27, she swapped her married name Waltraud Höllinger for the moniker VALIE EXPORT. A play on a cigarette brand, written in capital letters, it was a decisive rejection of patriarchal structures. She would be known neither by her father's name, nor by her ex-husband's.The Power of PerformanceHer work was intended to explode the structures containing her—in cinema, in art and in the wider society. In Action Pants: Genital Panic (1969) she walked along the rows of a Munich art cinema with her exposed pubic region level with punters' faces, and plastered the walls of Vienna with posters of herself in crotchless trousers holding a gun.For Tap and Touch Cinema in 1968, she constructed a theatre in a box strapped to her chest, with people on the street invited to reach into the darkness and touch her breasts while she watched them. Documentary of the performance exposes the shifting power dynamic between Export and the men who accept the invitation. It was brilliantly subversive and unsettling.More recently, her 1968 performance From the Portfolio of Doggedness has drawn attention—during which she led Peter Weibel crawling through the streets of Vienna by a dog lead. Weibel was dressed in a business suit, a disturbing echo of the commuters milling around him.A Lasting Feminist LegacyHer 1972 manifesto described how the spark kindled by women's art might ignite far-reaching social change. It concludes by stating the importance of documenting and honouring the life and work of those who had come before, as we must now do hers. "The future of women will be the history of woman."I grieve her in the most selfish way: there were so many things I wanted to ask her about. Having survived decades in which women's art was marginalised and ignored, she had so much to tell us. Like a fool, I kept delaying a planned interview. Now it's too late.
#Valie Export #feminist art #performance art
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Entertainment May 15, 2026

Renowned Feminist Artist Valie Export Dies at 85

Austrian performance artist and filmmaker Valie Export died in Vienna at age 85, three days before …
Lead: Valie Export’s Death Marks End of a Pioneering EraThe Austrian performance artist and filmmaker Valie Export passed away in Vienna on May 15, 2026, just three days shy of her 86th birthday. Her death closes a chapter on a career that consistently challenged the male gaze and redefined feminist expression in contemporary art.Groundbreaking Performances that Redefined the Male GazeExport’s early work shocked and fascinated audiences. In 1968 she staged "Tap and Touch Cinema", strapping a miniature theatre stage to her chest and inviting passers‑by to touch her bare breasts through a curtain, while a megaphone‑wielding colleague timed each action. The 1980 Venice Biennale centerpiece "Birth Bed" featured an oversized female abdomen, neon lights emanating from a vulva, and a TV broadcasting a Catholic mass, confronting patriarchal power structures head‑on.Key Milestones and Numbers in Export’s Career1940: Born Waltraud Lehner in Linz, Austria.1967: Adopted the name Valie Export (nickname + cigarette brand).1968: Co‑founded the Austrian Filmmakers Cooperative.1970: Faced pornography charges; custody of her daughter briefly withdrawn.1977 & 2007: Exhibited at Kassel’s documenta.1980: First female artist (with Maria Lassnig) to fill the Austrian pavilion at the Venice Biennale.1985: Feature film The Practice of Love nominated for the Golden Bear at Berlin.1995‑2005: Professor of multimedia and performance at the Academy of Media Arts, Cologne.2015: Linz opened the Valie Export Centre for Media and Performance Art.Impact on Feminist Art and Contemporary CultureCritics and curators, including gallerist Thaddaeus Ropac, describe Export as “one of the most visionary feminist artists” of post‑war Europe. Her interventions exposed the objectification of the female body, influencing artists such as Marina Abramović, who re‑enacted Export’s “Genital Panic” in 2005 at the Guggenheim. Museums worldwide now feature her work as a cornerstone of feminist art history.Looking Ahead: Preservation and Influence of Export’s WorkWith the establishment of the Linz centre and ongoing retrospectives, Export’s oeuvre is set to remain a reference point for future generations. Scholars anticipate new scholarly editions of her performances, while digital archives aim to make her interventions accessible to a global audience, ensuring that her challenge to patriarchal structures endures beyond her lifetime.
#Valie Export #Austrian performance art #Venice Biennale
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