Upcoming Events

Concerts in the Courtyard

July 9–August 27

Two paintings depicting nudes wearing elaborate masks that cover their entire head, both reclining on slopes of textured pattern

Left: Katherine Sherwood, Sleeping Venus, 2014. Mixed media on found cotton. Courtesy of Walter Maciel Gallery and the Artist. © Katherine Sherwood.

Right: Katherine Sherwood, Maja, 2014. Mixed media on found cotton. Courtesy of Walter Maciel Gallery and the Artist. © Katherine Sherwood.

Disability Pride Month

In 1997 Katherine Sherwood suffered a cerebral hemorrhage that partially paralyzed her, causing her to dramatically shift her life and artistic practice. She cofounded the Yelling Clinic, a collective of disabled artists, and began adapting nudes from Western art to embrace marginalized bodies.

Sherwood’s Sleeping Venus (2014) and Maja (2014) reimagine works  originally made through the male gaze to instead portray figures with an amputated leg and walking cane respectively. Both paintings incorporate imagery from Sherwood’s brain scans, foregrounding disability as a site of beauty, visibility, and empowerment.

See Sherwood’s transformative works in “Subvert, Repair, Reclaim: Contemporary Artists Take Back the Nude.”