Wikipedia:Meetup/ArtAndFeminism/Outcomes
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International Edit-a-thons
[edit]Since 2014, over 10,000 people at more than 800 events around the world have participated in Art Feminism’s Edit-a-thons, resulting in the creation and improvement of more than 33,000 articles on Wikipedia. The project has expanded to include an art commissioning program, curatorial collaborations, and a podcast. Foreign Policy Magazine named the founders Leading Global Thinkers and Art Feminism has been covered widely in the press. Art Feminism is based out of The Museum of Modern Art, New York, with nodes at the Center for Curatorial Studies Library, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson; ICA Boston; National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; Uffizi Gallery, Florence; Asia Art Archive & M , Hong Kong; The Menil Collection, Houston; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Lenbachhaus München; Yale University, New Haven; University of Nigeria, Nsukka; Princeton University; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago; Index – The Swedish Contemporary Art Foundation, Stockholm; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, and hundreds of other locations.
Summary of outcomes
[edit]2023 outcomes
[edit]2023 Outcomes
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The Power of Collective Action - Art Feminism in 2023 “I was able to understand that the impact on existing structures of oppression can be much greater when we act together for a more just, diverse, and socially equitable world. And working together to change these structures is one of our goals.” Resurfacing the words of former lead co-organizer, Juliana Monteiro We’re excited to share the power of our Collective Action in Year 10 of Ar Feminism. During this year’s A F campaign, our collective efforts have culminated in the coordination of 138 events worldwide, bringing together nearly 2000 dedicated editors! https://w.wiki/7FZJ [Data Map] As we pause to reflect, we're truly humbled by the incredible power of our community. A heartfelt thank you for being an essential part of it all! Here are some key moments that shaped our journey throughout this campaign.
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2022 outcomes
[edit]2022 Outcomes
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We send you huge congratulation and applause as a member of the Art Feminism community! According to our metrics, this year you joined over 1500 participants at 120 events hosted in 27 different languages. Thanks to this community, we’ve given one more step towards closing the information gaps related to gender, feminism, and the arts on Wikipedia. For the ninth year of Art Feminism, the leadership team urged event organizers to center community care within the context of COVID-19. Thus, we encouraged you to organize virtually as a way to minimize risks for those who are most vulnerable. We’re happy that our call was heard and most of the events this year either happened virtually or had virtual components. Here are some highlights about this years’ events and organizers:
All this and more has been possible thanks to you. |
2021 outcomes
[edit]2021 Outcomes
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2020 outcomes
[edit]2020 Outcomes
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Narrative description[edit]In light of the global pandemic of COVID-19, some of our scheduled events were able to pivot to virtual space, exhibiting a remarkable adaptability by various Art Feminism edit-a-thons organizers. Thanks to this, successful virtual events were held in Armenia, Brazil, Poland, across the US and more. Unfortunately not all organizers were able to shift to in-person to virtual events and their planned activities were ultimately canceled. As we prepare for our 2020-2021 campaign, “business as usual” is not effective or appropriate as we continue to be in a global pandemic simultaneously with a civil rights movement. It’s been reported that in a recent study, the majority of people will not feel comfortable returning to museums until a vaccine for COVID-19 is widely available. The pandemic is allowing us to focus internally and be less number driven. We want to work on intentional care and deepen our relationships within our community. Participants this year created articles for Irma Poma Canchumani, Mavi Doñate, Rhina Toruño, Group Material, Hertha Sponer, Marian Pastor Roces, Gabrielle L'Hirondelle Hill, Ingeborg Kahlenberg, People's Flag Show, Anne Marie Komissar, Kasturba Gandi, Guadalupe Rosales, Jota Mombaça, Bety Reis, Joana D'Arc da Silva Cavalcante, Djuena Tikuna, Olga Mariano, Lina Bögli and Anne Boyer, to name a few. We also want to acknowledge and thank all the organizers and partners whose events, unfortunately, weren’t able to move forward this year as planned. We recognize and celebrate their labor and efforts, as well. We are truly thankful for our global community! |
2019 outcomes
[edit]2019 Outcomes
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Narrative description[edit]For a more fleshed out reporting of events, [see here.] 4,360 people attended 311 events around the world in 43 countries, which took place during the months of March and April. The goal of the Art Feminism campaign is to bolster coverage of feminism, gender, and the arts on Wikipedia — as a response to the encyclopedia’s well-known content gaps. Highlights of articles created and improved include Anni Albers, Winifred Hall Allen, , Mieke Bal, Deanna Bowen, Tania Bruguera, Jade Nasogaluak Carpenter, Elizabeth Catlett, Sarah Charlesworth, Sarah Charlesworth, , Che Gossett, Barbara Hammer, Nancy Holt, Holly Lee, Luanne Martineau, Haruko Okano, Judy Pfaff, Griselda Pollock, Gabriela Rodríguez, Leanne Simpson, and Women’s International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell. This year, we saw a more than 300% increase in community across Facebook (86% growth) and Instagram (311% growth). We also made a major change to our communications and organizing strategy; launching the Gender and The Non-Binary campaign. The campaign facilitated greater growth and engagement among our digital communities due to the use of our hashtags #artandfeminism, #noweditingaf, and #beyondthebinary. Through the consistent use of the hashtag and our focus on engaging our online communities in conversation around their experiences related to gender equity, gender identity, women's rights, trans rights as human rights, and intersectional feminism we were able to amplify our messaging and reach. |
2018 outcomes
[edit]2018 Outcomes
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Narrative description[edit]Over 4,000 people at more than 275 events around the world participated in Art Feminism’s fifth annual Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, which took place across the months of March and April. This global effort created or improved nearly 22,000 articles on Wikipedia, almost four times the output of the 2017 events. Highlights of the 2018 Edit-a-thon include content added to and pages created for notable figures including Christina Battle, Alexandra Bell, Torkwase Dyson, Silvia Federici, Dara Friedman, Juliana Huxtable, Gertrude Jekyll, Chō Kōran, Griselda Pollock, Annie Pootoogook, Collier Schorr, Tschabalala Self, Roberta Smith, Nobuko Tsuchiura, and Sam Vernon. Edit-a-thons took place during the months of March and April at hundreds of institutions across the globe, including Anchorage Museum; Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson; Auckland Central Library; Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore; University of California, Berkeley; Liebig12, Berlin; Untitled Art Society, Calgary; University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; University College Cork; Memorial University, Corner Brook; The University of Western Australia, Crawley; University of North Texas, Denton; University of New Hampshire, Durham; National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin; Trinity College, University of Dublin; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; University of Arkansas, Fayetteville; Uffizi Gallery, Florence; Bibliothèque d’art et d’archéologie des Musées d’art et d’histoire, Genève; Tentmaker Ghana; Glasgow Print Studio; The Menil Collection, Houston; Goethe Zentrum Kampala; Siddhartha Cottage, Kathmandu; Modern Fuel and Queen’s University, Kingston; Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal, Lisbon; Muzeum Sztuki w Łodzi MS2; The Photographers’ Gallery, London; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Caffi Alys, Machynlleth; Artexte and Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal; Lenbachhaus München; Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick; Yale University, New Haven; Smith College, Northampton; Norsk Komponistforening, Oslo; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Princeton University; Mount Allison University, Sackville; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego; Art Practical and For-Site Foundation, San Francisco; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Stanford University; Index, Stockholm; Fisher Library, University of Sydney; womany wonderland, Taipei City; Temple University, Japan Campus, Tokyo; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa; Blitz, Valletta; The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown; Afroleadership, Yaoundé; and online with Women in Red. |
2017 outcomes
[edit]2017 Outcomes
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Narrative description[edit]Over 2,500 participants at more than 200 events around the world participated in Art Feminism’s fourth annual Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, which took place across the month of March around Women’s History Month. This global effort created or improved nearly 6,500 articles on Wikipedia, almost twice the output of the 2016 events. Highlights of the 2017 Edit-a-thon include content added to Wikipedia pages for niv Acosta, Hilma af Klint, Morehshin Allahyari, Xenobia Bailey, Rebecca Belmore, Hannah Black, Octavia E. Butler, Lygia Clark, Andrea Crespo, Leslie Hewitt, Christine Sun Kim, Deana Lawson, New media art, Sondra Perry, Paul B. Preciado, and Martine Syms. The 2017 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon grew in complexity and geographic scope. First time organizing institutions included Open Foundation West Africa in collaboration with African Women Development Fund, Accra; Spelman College, Atlanta; Transgender Europe in collaboration with Artists Without a Cause and Room 4 Resistance, Berlin; Griffith University, Brisbane; Bryn Mawr College; Government Museum and Art Gallery, Chandigarh; Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit; National University of Ireland, Galway; Women’s Library and Information Centre Foundation, Istanbul; Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles; Oslo National Academy of the Arts; Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec, Montréal; PLATFORM, Munich; University of Nigeria, Nsukka; Parsons Paris; Maus Hábitos, Porto; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico, San Juan; The Royal Armoury, Stockholm; Gardiner Museum, Toronto; and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC. Organizers in Geneva, Switzerland coordinated city-wide edit-a-thons at Centre de la photographie, Lestime, Musée d’art et d’histoire de Genève, Pavillon bleu and l’Université de Genève. For the first time edit-a-thons were held across Italy at the Uffizi Gallery, Florence; BASE Milano; Museo Archeologico Provinciale, Potenza; Rome MAXXI; Artè Caffè Culturale, Salerno; and Ca’ Foscari University, Venice. |
2016 outcomes
[edit]2016 Outcomes
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Granular results: Wikipedia:Meetup/ArtAndFeminism/Outcomes2016 Even more granular results:
Narrative description[edit]Over 2500 participants at more than 175 events around the world participated in Art Feminism’s third annual Wikipedia Edit-a-thon, resulting in the creation of 2000 new pages and improvements to 1500 articles on Wikipedia. This represents a significant increase over the 2015 events, with more than double the number of participants and triple the number of articles created or improved. Alongside the central event at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the 175 events were held across every inhabited continent and in 30 countries at venues including: Ashesi University Brekuso, Accra; Tate Britain, London; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City; Gus Fisher Gallery, The University of Auckland; Archives Nationales, Paris; The Menil Collection, Houston; SCAD Hong Kong; Espacio Fundación Telefónica, Lima; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC.; and a month-long online edit-a-thon hosted by Women In Red. As of this writing an additional 10 events are scheduled for later in April. Highlights of the 2016 Edit-a-thon include new Wikipedia pages for Unity Bainbridge, Manon de Boer, Tina Charlie, Otelia Cromwell, Aurora Reyes Flores, Liz Magic Laser, Park McArthur, Elizabeth McIntosh, Divya Mehra, Anne Pasternak, and Sara Greenberger Rafferty and improved articles for Megumi Igarashi, Julie Mehretu, Ana Mendieta, Wangechi Mutu, Lorraine O’Grady, Porpentine, Faith Ringgold, Martine Sims, Carrie Mae Weems, and Zitkala-Sa. Click here for the complete list of outcomes. 2016 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon events[edit]United States[edit]Organized by date, then alpha by city Before March 4, 2016[edit]
March 4, 2016[edit]
March 5, 2016[edit]
March 6, 2016[edit]
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Canada[edit]Organized by date, then alpha by city Before March 4, 2016[edit]
March 4, 2016[edit]
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México[edit]
South America[edit]Organized by date, then alpha by city
Europe[edit]August 27, 2016[edit]Before March 4, 2016[edit]Organized by date, then alpha by city
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March 5–6, 2016[edit]
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Middle East and Africa[edit]March 5, 2016[edit]
Asia[edit]Organized by date, then alpha by city
Oceania[edit]
Online / remote participation[edit]
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2015 outcomes
[edit]2015 Outcomes
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Granular results: Wikipedia:Meetup/ArtAndFeminism/Outcomes2015 Narrative description[edit]We had approximately 200 participants come through MoMA: librarians, academics, curators, artists, art lovers, feminists, male allies, experienced Wikipedians, etc. Trainings were held throughout the day, in multiple locations across three floors of the Department of Education. New and experienced editors worked in a variety spaces: the mezzanine level, two classrooms, the Time Warner theatre, multiple lounges, and the library. The day was marked by a spirit of collaboration, with spontaneous volunteering and enthusiastic team editing. There were over 75 events around the world, from small gatherings of friends to large groups at significant cultural institutions like LACMA, the Walker Art Center, and the Stedelijk Museum. We estimate that at least 400 new articles created, and another 500 articles with significant improvements. Please see below for the full list of nodes. A handful of the newly created articles include: Elise Forrest Harleston, Amy Maria Sacker, Janet Payne Bowles, Lisl Steiner, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Kali (fine artist), Betty G. Miller, Camille Henrot, Sarah McEneaney, Kyle DeWoody, Jennie C. Jones, and the Heresies Collective. Some of the improved articles include: Cecily Brown, Elaine de Kooning, Evelyn De Morgan, Carol Shaw (video game designer), Coco Fusco, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Valerie Hegarty, Yael Bartana, and Augusta Savage
2015 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon events[edit]
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List of 2015 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon Hosts
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United States
, March 7, 2015
Canada
Europe
Oceania
South America Online
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List of 2015 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon events that did not take place on International Women's Day
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alphabetical
*Please add your event here |
2014 outcomes
[edit]2014 Outcomes
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Narrative description[edit]We had 150 participants come through Eyebeam: librarians, academics, curators, artists, art lovers, feminists, male allies, experienced Wikipedians, etc. At the peak midway through, we ran out of chairs! At the start there was excitement in the air, along with some anxiety about the technicalities of editing Wikipedia, but after a series of 20 minute training sessions the participants got to work. A few hours in everything had gelled, and people were hard at work. It was such a good atmosphere. Many of the other locations described a similar experience. There were 30 satellite events around the world, with attendances ranging from 6 to 60. We know that there were at least 101 new articles created, and another 90 articles with significant improvements. We expect that number to rise, as a lot of work has yet to be accounted for, and it is going to take a few days (or more) to figure out exactly how much we accomplished. A handful of the initial list of 95 or so created articles includes: Mary Miss, Joan Semmel, Lisa Oppenheim, Frances Stark, Eve Mosher, Laurie Halsey Brown, Xaviera Simmons, Patti Warashina, Cosima von Bonin, Liza Bear, Lizzie Fitch, Senga Nengudi, Monika Bravo, and Zarina. The current list is here: Wikipedia:Meetup/ArtAndFeminism_2014/Outcomes The reason that we do not have exact numbers for articles created is that some new articles are stuck in the Articles for creation process, which can take up to 3 weeks. At the Eyebeam event we advocated skipping this process, and creating articles directly from red links. Additionally, many of the participants failed to record all the work they did on the results page despite our best efforts. This is somewhat inevitable. given there were 31 events, with roughly 600 participants. 2014 Art Feminism Edit-a-thon events in the USA[edit]
2014 International Edit-a-thons[edit]Eyebeam Art and Technology Center and 30 satellite locations, February 1, 2014 alphabetical
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Outcomes tools
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External links
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