The Women’s Mobile Museum is in Point Breeze for a three-week run

The Women’s Mobile Museum is a traveling exhibition from 10 female Philadelphia artists of different ages, ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds that challenges social and economic barriers of the traditional art world and asks the question: Who is art for? The museum is now in Point Breeze and is open to the public. 

The Women’s Mobile Museum is in Point Breeze for a three-week run

The Women’s Mobile Museum is a year-long residency and apprenticeship program led by internationally renowned South African artist-activist Zanele Muholi. Her first major US-based project is a collaboration with 10 women artists of different ages, ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds. The artists and Muholi started their journey in September and plan to showcase their finished projects on the road in a six-month traveling exhibition. Their latest stop is in Point Breeze. 

Since February, the female poets, photographers, painters and digital artists have been collaborating with one another and Muholi to create art reflective of their individual and collective experiences. Through the combined apprenticeship and Women’s Mobile Museum exhibition, the program combats the challenges that economically-disadvantaged women experience in art spaces, such as a lack of artistic resources and opportunities to showcase their work, and little or no access to higher education and professional training. 

The apprenticeship has provided the artists with funding, access to previously unavailable tools and resources, exhibition opportunities and formal training. In its final form, the Women’s Mobile Museum will remind visitors that art can and should be done by, seen by and feature all people, taking it outside its typical Western worldview lens.

“These women have come together to share their personal struggles, while simultaneously giving a voice to the overarching struggles their audiences have dealt with their entire lives,” said Lori Waselchuk, Exhibitions and Programs Coordinator at PPAC. “These artists have not been given a voice or a place in their world – the art world – until now, and they’re using this newfound platform as an opportunity to change the conversation and expand the lens through which art is viewed.”

The will be located at the Dixon House in Point Breeze, 1529 S 22nd St. until November 17. Learn more about the traveling museum here

Metro Philadelphia

Recent Posts

Revised Bus Revolution plan set to go for SEPTA board approval this month

The Bus Revolution plan has been finalized, and SEPTA’s board, which previously put off a…

7 hours ago

76ers vs Knicks: Betting preview, predictions & TV Schedule

The Philadelphia 76ers are back home in Philly to take on the New York Knicks…

9 hours ago

Keep New York out of Philly: 76ers owners buy 2,000 tickets for Thursday’s game

The Philadelphia 76ers off-court strategy heading into Game 6 of their NBA playoff series is…

10 hours ago

Lightning in a Bottle: Will Shipley Ready to Contribute for Eagles

The one highlight the Philadelphia Eagles chose to broadcast of Will Shipley after they drafted…

10 hours ago

How “the Philadelphia way” has turned the Eagles into a premier franchise

The Philadelphia Eagles haven’t always been a premier franchise in the NFL. After years of…

12 hours ago

Vendor that mishandled Pennsylvania virus data to pay $2.7 million in federal whistleblower case

By MICHAEL RUBINKAM Associated Press A large staffing firm that performed COVID-19 contact tracing for…

13 hours ago

This website uses cookies.