GUERRILLA GIRLS: REINVENTING THE 'F' WORD: FEMINISM
The Guerrilla Girls are anonymous artist activists who use disruptive headlines, outrageous visuals and killer statistics to expose gender and ethnic bias and corruption in art, film, politics and pop culture. We believe in an intersectional feminism that fights for human rights for all people. We undermine the idea of a mainstream narrative by revealing the understory, the subtext, the overlooked, and the downright unfair. We have done hundreds of unforgettable projects (street posters, banners, actions, books, and videos) all over the world. We also do interventions and exhibitions at art museums, blasting them on their own walls for their bad behavior and discriminatory practices, including a stealth projection on the façade of the Whitney Museum about income inequality and the super rich hijacking art. Our book, Guerrilla Girls: The Art of Behaving Badly collects hundreds of our projects and was named one of the best art books of 2020 by The New York Times and the Los Angeles Times. Our retrospectives and traveling exhibitions have attracted thousands. At London’s Tate Modern, our work is on continuous display, where, in 2024, 17,000 people came to meet us in person! Other exhibitions include the São Paulo Museum of Art; the Venice Biennale; Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam; Museum of Military History, Dresden; Art Basel Hong Kong; Minneapolis Institute of Art; The Centre Pompidou, Paris; Toi o Tāmaki Museum, New Zealand; National Museum of World Writing, Korea; National Museum Bulgaria; and hundreds more. Now on view at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, How to Be a Guerrilla Girl, presents a new large-scale commission alongside an archival exhibition of how (and why) we did what we did. Our motto: Do one thing. If it works, do another. If it doesn’t, do another anyway. Creative complaining works!