Parties

At the 2020 MAD Ball, a Celebration of Artist Judy Chicago

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The artist was the "guest" of honor at the virtual event. 

Chicago is perhaps best known for her triangular dinner party installation from 1979, now at the Brooklyn Museum. In the work, Chicago improves on history and gives women a proverbial seat at the table. The art piece features 39 settings, each dedicated to a female trailblazer ranging from Sacajawea to Susan B. Anthony.

It’s a piece that remains enduringly pertinent despite the 40 or so years since its conception. The piece’s success has much to do with its straightforwardness, as the artist extrapolated in a New York Times op-ed published shortly after the world locked down this spring. Chicago called upon her fellow artists to create meaningful, society-shifting works that speak to the public in a language that could be understood by all.

“Can you hear me? Can you see me?” asked Chicago, streaming in from her home in Santa Fe, New Mexico as she received her Lifetime Achievement Award in the form of a tiara—a yonic, pink velvet headpiece with spoons inspired by the cutlery in Chicago’s famous artwork. “This is what I have to say: I don’t exactly know how to feel about being crowned… I have gotten a number of awards and I have to say this tops them all.”

Meanwhile, over in Manhattan. Alexander Hankin, the trustee of MAD’s young patrons group, MAD Luminaries, opted to celebrate Chicago and her Dinner Party in a lovely and literal way. By welcoming friends Timo Weiland, Shantell Martin, Fischer Cherry, and Mia Wright-Ross at a socially distanced, masks-on viewing party for the Mad Ball. It was a masquerade ball for the year 2020. And yes, Judy, we hear you loud and clear!