that violence is better than sharing. The asser- tion of womanhood is a challenge to all these values that allow war, dehumanization, rape, and art that lacks relationship with reality to continue.6 Faith Wilding elaborated on the relation be- tween personal and political change: It has always been a tenet of the feminist movement that the personal is political. It is political because when a person becomes transformed, enters into public experience, and infuses her own experience into the public, the world becomes transformed for her, but in addition she then has the possibility of trans- forming the world. . . . We have witnessed too many people who are in politics who have never experienced any kind of personal change or real vision. . . . What specifically triggered the controversy? The art in the exhibition included a wide range of feminist work: parodies on public images of women (Helen Alm Roth and Carole Caroom- pas); private images of women and interior spaces (Margaret Neilson); women'’s self-images integrated with their historical and mythologi- cal references (Judy Chicago and Faith Wilding); references to women’s vulnerability, powerless- ness, and powerfulness (Astrid Preston); relics of admired female figures as magic talismans (Hazel Slawson); communal efforts (Maria Karras); and the quilt/grid pattern and color pink seen as tributes to women’s collaborative forms (Sheila de Bretteville). In her tableau environment Remnants in Homage to Lily Bart from Edith Wharton’s House of Mirth, Nancy Youdelman “recon- structed” a scene from the book with theatrical grandeur and presence. The tableau represents the climax of Wharton’s novel, when Lily Bart, having lost her wealth and status, kills herself. Hauntingly life-like, her full-size figure, bearing the artist’s own features, reclines in bed. Her skin tone is grayish and the sleeping drops that caused her death are by the side of her bed. The tloor is cluttered with remnants of her life: letters, photographs, delicate laces, dresses, corsets, and veils. Youdelman creates metaphors (sleep, passivity, death) for what have been essential aspects of female experience: eco- nomic dependence on others, lack of ultimate control over one’s own life, victimization by circumstances. In the guise of a 19th-century tragedy, Lily Bart's story is emblematic for women who have remained powerless in society. In Youdelman’s photographic series Leaves: A Self Portrait, the artist is lying on the ground, gradually being covered with leaves (from pho- tograph to photograph) until she is entirely buried: Faith Wilding. Chrysalis II. 1974. Graphite and watercolor. 42% X 38%, It represented ways | felt; | felt numb all over, or like a sleepwalker, something that could just disappear, and | think that is that powerless- ness in female experience, sleep. There is also something esthetic about it; | love the color of the leaves; it is about death and one could suppose that it might also mean renewal. . . . Youdelman treads on precarious ground in pre- senting the passive female figure, lying uncon- scious, as horizontal female figures have so often been used in the history of (male) art to entice the spectator by reminding him of his vertical superiority. However, Youdelman'’s tab- leau successfully evokes the solemn empathy of the viewer, who is confronted with the victim’s feelings about her powerlessness. In Jan Lester’s tableau environment—Cats Enamoured Kits: Helpless Tom and Merciless Sex Kitten (1974)—two cats are anthropomor- phized to enact a sexual-encounter scene. The human environment, dress, and behavior pat- terns throw into relief the stereotyped patterns of men and women, only the roles are reversed. The female cat plays the determined “attacker,” the seducer, while the male cat withdraws with some apprehension. At the same time, Lester sees her work as a manifestation of how women are perceived when they take an active role in a situation: The tableau had to do with sexual politics and with the female taking power. It goes far- ther than just one sexual encounter, it goes out into the world in general. It is one situation like a snapshot that makes it clear that this goes on in all situations in society. 73