HERESIES is an idea-oriented journal devoted to the examination of art and politics from a feminist perspective. We believe that what is commonly called art can have a political im- pact, and that in the making of art and of all cultural artifacts our identities as women play a distinct role. We hope that HERESIES will stim- ulate dialogue around radical political and es- thetic theory, encourage the writing of the his- tory of femina sapiens, and generate new cre- ative energies among women. It will be a place where diversity can be articulated. We are com- mitted to the broadening of the definition and function of art. HERESIES is structured as a collective of fem- inists, some of whom are also socialists, Marx- ists, lesbian feminists or anarchists; our fields include painting, sculpture, writing, anthropol- ogy, literature, performance, art history, archi- tecture and filmmaking. While the themes of the individual issues will be determined by the collective, each issue will have a different edi- torial staff made up of contributors as well as members of the collective. Each issue will take a different visual form, chosen by the group re- sponsible. HERESIES will try to be accountable to and in touch with the international feminist community. An open evaluation meeting will be held after the appearance of each issue. Themes will be announced well in advance in order to collect material from many sources. (See inside of back cover for list of projected issues.) Possibly satellite pamphlets and broad- sides will be produced continuing the discus- sion of each central theme. As women, we are aware that historically the connections between our lives, our arts and our ideas have been suppressed. Once these con- nections are clarified they can function as a means to dissolve the alienation between artist and audience, and to understand the relation- ship between art and politics, work and work- ers. As a step toward a demystification of art, we reject the standard relationship of criticism to art within the present system, which has often become the relationship of advertiser to product. We will not advertise a new set of genius-products just because they are made by women. We are not committed to any particu- lar style or esthetic, nor to the competitive mentality that pervades the art world. Our view of feminism is one of process and change, and we feel that in the process of this dialogue we can foster a change in the meaning of art. THE COLLECTIVE: Patsy Beckert, Joan Brader- man, Mary Beth Edelson, Harmony Hammond, Elizabeth Hess, Joyce Kozloff, Arlene Ladden, Lucy Lippard, Mary Miss, Marty Pottenger, Mi- riam Schapiro, Joan Snyder, Elke Solomon, Pat Steir, May Stevens, Michelle Stuart, Susana Torre, Elizabeth Weatherford, Sally Webster, Nina Yankowitz. HERESIES: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics is published in January, May, September, December by Heresies Collective, Inc. at the Fine Arts Building, 105 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10013. Subscription rates: $10.00 for four issues ($16.00 for institutions; $12.00 outside the U.S.). Single copy: $2.50. Address all corres- pondence to HERESIES, P.O. Box 766, Canal Street Station, New York, N.Y. 10013. HERESIES, #1, January 1977 © Her- esies Collective. Application to mail at 2nd-class postage rates is pending at New York, N.Y., and additional mailing offices. Frontispiece (traditional status values of the village . . .): poster by Australian artist Mandy Martin. This issue of Heresies was typeset by Myrna Zimmerman in Optima and printed by the Capital City Press, Montpelier, Vermont.