76 ings and they weren’t. They seemed to have a good time, and related to the drawings im- mediately. Now, it is not necessary to have a good time when viewing art, but there was blanket recognition of the issues. When | looked in the newspaper | noticed that you could apply sexual politics, directly or indirectly, to almost every image in the adver- tisement world; every image implies sexual promises. My original fantasy was that | would have enough money to take out a full page ad in the L.A. Times, and just change the images a little bit. Obviously the most political thing about that was my fantasy about how many people | could reach that way. It is the nature of good political art to be recognizable and understandable by a lot of people and maybe at a visceral level too. . . . Political art is often satirical, and probably most effective at that level. The exhibition provided an opportunity to witness the heightened impact of contemporary feminist art when viewed by a “non-art” audi- ence—a cross-section of middle America that normally would not encounter art, and specifi- cally by a female audience alienated from femi- nism. (The negative response came primarily from women 9) It can also be seen as a test case for implementing a long-desired goal —bringing art into a public daily work environment. Had the show at Aerospace been exhibited in any number of established or alternative gallery spaces, it probably would not have caused un- usual debate, and certainly it would not have prompted any doubt about the artistic merit of the work.10 In the Cafeteria Conference Rooms of Aerospace, however, the exhibit infiltrated a male environment that ordinarily would not dis- play women’s work made from a feminist per- spective and certainly would not give it public acclaim. The work was predominantly consid- ered scandalous; it engendered passionate ob- jections and firm negative judgments. The show was labeled pornography rather than art by people who were unlikely ever to have consid- ered what is or isn’t art. This disclaimer was the protesters” attempt to dismiss such threatening and upsetting mate- rial. Casting it as pornography implied that the art lacked any real esthetic value and therefore need not be taken seriously. The level of naive- té of the critical responses—when opposed to the more sophisticated criticism to which we are accustomed from much of the art world— was refreshing in its directness. One letter of protest stated: | object to the Art Exhibition. .. .1 find it de- grading. As a woman, and hopefully a lady, | find it extremely offensive. . . .| am unable to lower my sights to the gutter level of this ex- hibit. In my opinion, it is lewd, vulgar, obscene and immoral. Since when did good taste and modesty go out-of-style?1 In another letter, signed by 36 people— almost a petition—the art was called: .. .in poor taste, bad character, and a definite infringement on the rights of all women and men who give sex the dignity, respect and honor that was intended for the human race. The Aerospace Corporation has drastically changed its practices since the 1960s to allow this type of “smut” to be exhibited, and the employees were encouraged through desk-to- desk distribution and advertising to view the exhibition. We are sure that with much less expense to the Company, the representatives. . .could have arranged for a display of pornography, pictures and books from one of the adult book- stores in the Los Angeles Area, and at a lower insurance premium. . . . The Aerospace Wom- en’s Committee does not speak for all of the female'employees, as there are those of us who still adhere to the old principle that we were liberated immediately when we were born in America, we enjoy being treated as a woman, and we are definitely Miss or Mrs. and not Ms.12 Clearly these female viewers at Aerospace “saw” in the art their own worst fears of femi- nism. Their objections, though focused on the exhibition, were rooted in their alienation from the organized women’s movement. Confronted by art that dealt with an oppression familiar in most of their lives, real images that did not correspond to the illusion of the American dream presented a powerful threat. The art was perceived as offensive precisely because it was not placed in a neutralizing en- vironment like a gallery, where viewers can easily hide behind anonymity. The art invaded their own daily working sphere where it threat- ened how they were viewed in their professional positions. Brought into the work context, the art reflected more directly upon them. The height- ened emotional reactions caused a strong need to disassociate themselves verbally from the picture of womanhood presented in the show. While identification with female experiences and values is threatening in any situation in a patriarchal society, such identification may be virtually impossible when introduced into a work environment dominated by male values and power. Such an environment, by implica- tion, and as a condition for the possibility of working there, demands a woman’s identifica- tion with patriarchy over a recognition of her own oppression. To admit that what was ex- pressed in the art is real —women’s powerless- ness and powerfulness, their sexual feelings and experiences, and the fact that women are rape victims—is to shatter the very myth that has sustained traditional womanhood all along. It is admitting publicly to an embarrassing, private part of woman’s experience, which she has attempted to conceal even from herself in an effort to preserve the “human dignity” of which