When speaking of the freedom that the Bay Area scene granted the women artists during the 1950s, Gechtoff recalled:
There was none of that macho bullshit. When I came to New York I was horrified at how the female artists were being disregarded. I think it was different in San Francisco because there were no commercially viable galleries….It gave us permission to be more experimental.
Ground zero for many of the West Coast women was the California School of Fine Arts (CSFA). Professors like Douglas MacAgy, Doris (Dorr) Bothwell, and Clyfford Still were active in the New York scene and brought fresh ideas and a renewed energy to the school. Students who passed through CSFA were Ruth Armer, Bernice Bing, Lilly Fenichel, and Emiko Nakano, among others. Another center was the University of California, Berkeley with graduates Jay DeFeo, Claire Falkenstein, Zoe Longfield, and Masako Takahashi.
This exhibition highlights the work of recognized artists such as Joan Brown, Jay DeFeo, Sonia Gechtoff, and Deborah Remington, while bringing to light many of the significant artists that have only recently begun to be receive much-deserved research and recognition. Artists featured are Ruth Armer, Katherine Barieau, Bernice Bing, Adelie Landis Bischoff, Pamela Boden, Dorr Bothwell, Joan Brown, Marie Johnson Calloway, Jay DeFeo, Claire Falkenstein, Lilly Fenichel, Sonia Gechtoff, Nancy Genn, Ynez Johnson, Zoe Longfield, Emiko Nakano, Irene Pattinson, Margaret Peterson, Sonya Rapoport, Deborah Remington, Frann Spencer Reynolds, Nell Sinton, Masako Takahashi, and Ruth Wall.
West Coast Women of Abstract Expressionism opens with a reception Thursday, June 1, 2023, 6 - 8 p.m. and is on view through July 1, 2023. The exhibition is accompanied by a 46-page catalogue with an essay by Frances Lazare.