HAVE MASK, WILL TRAVEL
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BOOKINGS WITH THE GROUPS GUERRILLA GIRLS ON TOUR AND GUERRILLAGIRLSBROADBAND ARE NOT BOOKINGS WITH US.
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GUERRILLA GIRLS' APPEARANCES
For years the Guerrilla Girls have been stirring up audiences with our presentations and workshops in full jungle drag. We have appeared at schools, museums and organizations of all types, in almost every state in the U.S. and on almost every continent. For a complete list, see “Lectures/ performances/ workshops” on our chronology page.
The performance lasts about an hour and a half, followed by a question period. We take the audience through how we came up with some of our many, many posters, books (The Guerrilla Girls Bedside Companion to the History of Western Art, Bitches, Bimbos and Ballbreakers: The Guerrilla Girls' Guide to Female Stereotypes) and actions about discrimination in art, film, politics, etc.
In our performances for 2010-11, we will also be performing skits with the audience, and speaking about how we invaded the Oscars with billboard and sticker campaigns on discrimination in Hollywood. And we'll tell all about our 17-foot posters in the 2005 Venice Biennale, Istanbul, Athens and Mexico City.
AESTHETICIZE YOUR ACTIVISM: WORKSHOPS & ONLINE SEMINARS
We also conduct workshops where we help students produce their own activist projects on issues that are important to them. Usually this is a half-day activity following a GG appearance. Plus, we’re developing new ways to conduct extended workshops through onsite residencies, internet conferencing and distance learning.
For more information, please contact FRIDA KAHLO at gg@guerrillagirls.com
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING ABOUT THE GUERRILLA GIRLS' GIGS:
This was the most successful and enriching program/event/speaker I have heard in my four years here. —Student evaluation form, College of Creative Studies, Detroit, 4.12.2002
A pair of Guerrilla Girls, emissaries from a group of New York-based, feminist art activists, packed Loyola University's Roussel Hall last week with 600 enthusiastic fans. The two women, wearing gorilla masks, showed slides, performed satirical skits and regaled the crowd with tales of trench warfare fought against the mostly male art establishment. The show was sophisticated, sometimes self-deprecating and certainly inspirational to the eager audience. Doug MacCash, Art Critic, New OrleansTimes-Picayune, 3.15.2002
Dear Guerrilla Girls: I recently caught a Guerrilla Girls' presentation that stopped in Vancouver and wanted to express how amazing an experience it was. Where else can one educate themselves on some serious subjects, share disgust with a whole audience, and find time to laugh one's ass off in one night? I also wanted to express my appreciation--as a human, an artist, and a person of colour--for what the GGs are working toward. Audience member, Vancouver, 2000
If you want to know what the Guerrilla Girls are up to
and where we'll be next, check out our 