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Advocacy
- Women's Employment in the Arts
Overview
Women are creating some of the most exciting and challenging art
in the United States today. And yet, despite great strides in other fields
and a few high-visibility success stories, women continue to face enormous
employment discrimination in the arts and media.
The Fund for Women Artists
is dedicated to helping women overcome barriers directly by raising funds
and providing other resources to help women do their art. At the same
time, we need to educate the public about the continuing problems of gender
bias and pressure institutions to change. Not only do women suffer by
being shut out, but the culture as a whole is poorer when it is deprived
of the vision and creativity of women artists.
We
have listed some helpful studies and links to other organizations working
in these areas below. You can also sign up to receive our free newsletter, the WomenArts News, which features articles on these and other issues affecting women in the arts.
Sign
Up for the WomenArts News>>
Women's Employment
in Theatre
NYSCA Study
on Women in Theatre
New
York State Council on the Arts Theatre Program Report on the Status of
Women: A Limited Engagement?
By
Susan Jonas & Suzanne Bennett
The
New York State Council on the Arts Theatre Program conducted a survey
of the 2,000 plays being presented in the U.S. in 2001-2002, and found
that only 17% had women writers and only 16% had women directors.
Read More>>
Guerrilla
Girls on Tour
www.guerrillagirlsontour.com
The
Girlcott list on the Monkey Business page lists theatres in the United
States that have no plays by women in their current (2002/03 or 2003/04)
seasons. The "Good News" section at the bottom of the page
praises theatres that are producing work by women.
Women Count
In
response to the New York State Council's report, a group of artists
in New York issued a call to theatres around the country to produce
more plays written and directed by women.
Read More>>
Women's Employment
in Film & Television
The
Celluloid Ceiling
The
Celluloid Ceiling: Behind the Scenes and On-Screen Employment of Women
in the Top 250 Films of 2004.
By
Martha M. Lauzen, Ph.D., San Diego State University
Lauzen
found that over the last four years, the percentage of women working as directors, executive producers, producers, writers, cinematographers, and editors on the top 250 domestic grossing films has declined from 19% in 2001 to 16% in 2004, and that women comprised only 5% of directors in 2004, slightly less than half of their percentage in 2000.
Read More>>
Boxed In
Boxed
In: Women On Screen and Behind the Scenes in the 2003-2004 Prime-time
Season
By
Martha M. Lauzen, Ph.D., San Diego State University.
Lauzen found that women comprised 23% of all creators, executive producers,
producers, directors, writers, editors, and directors of photography
on prime- time TV shows in 2003-04, a percentage that has remained
virtually unchanged for the last six seasons. The percentage of women
writers reached a recent historical high of 31% while women editors
plummeted to a recent historical low of 10%. The percentages of women
creators, executive producers, producers, directors, and directors of
photography remained relatively stable.
On
screen, male characters outnumbered females by almost two to one (60%
males, 40% females). Female characters were younger than their male
counterparts, and overwhelmingly white. For example, Asian-American
women (3% of the prime-time characters) only slightly outnumbered extra-terrestrial
and demon women (2% of the characters). Read
More>>
Women in
UK Film Industry Earn Less
www.ukfilmcouncil.org.uk/news/?p=D4A15778051a92723
ChNv2E8F676&skip=0
A
new study by the UK Film Council and Skillset, a public-private film
industry training group, found that while women in the film industry
in the United Kingdom are more qualified than men in the industry, they
earn significantly less. Women are also much less likely than men to
be married or have dependent children. CLick on the link above to read
the report.
New York
Women in Film and Television
www.nywift.org/article.aspx?id=60
The
"Status of Women in the Industry" section of the site includes
an excellent assortment of studies and articles.
Movies Directed
by Women
www.moviesbywomen.com
Information
on historical women directors, statistics on women directors, and Director
interviews. You can also sign up here to be placed on the First Weekender's
Group mailing list and hear about films by women that are about to open.
Supporting a film on its first weekend shows that films by women can
have box-office clout.
Girls, Women
+ Media Project
www.mediaandwomen.org
Activist
site with summaries of studies of bias in news media and coverage of
women's sports, as well as studies of imagery of women in film and television.
Women's Employment
in Classical Music
Kristina
Kohler, Women's Philharmonic Executive Director
www.womensphil.org
From
an interview with NYFA Current, August 7, 2003:
"The
American Symphony Orchestra League 2002/03 Repertoire Report shows that
fewer than 1% of works programmed in the 2002/03 season represent works
by women. Of the 484 composers programmed in the 2002/03 season by 104
significant League member orchestras, only 5% were women. Of the 104
world premieres listed in the report, only 10% represent works by women
composers.
Commissioning
of works by women composers has begun to pick up for some composers
(i.e. Jennifer Higdon, Chen Yi, Augusta Read Thomas). However, women
on the whole still lag far behind: Of the 85 total organizations applying
on behalf of a composer to Meet the Composer's (MTC) commissioning grants
in 2002, only 19% represented a woman composer. Of the 17 awarded Meet
the Composer grants, 24% (4) went to a woman composer. Of the 44 winners
of the Broadcast Music, Inc. Student Composer Awards for Classical Music
over the past five years (1998-2002), again, only 5% (or two) have been
women.
There
are no women conductors/music directors employed by the largest
25 North American symphonies (according to budget size of orchestra), and
women represent only 11% of all conducting positions in the nation."
International
Alliance for Women in Music
http://music.acu.edu/www/iawm/home.html
Organization
that celebrates women in music, with activist campaigns to increase
women's employment, mostly in classical music.
Women's Employment
in Dance
Dance
Theatre Workshop notes that based on Apollinaire Scherr's November 4,
2001 New York Times article "Making a Career With One Eye on a
Gender Gap": In 1976 Wendy Perron and Stephanie Woodard found that
while women constituted the majority of choreographers, dancers administrators,
teachers and students, men received a larger proportion of prizes and
opportunities and that a quarter century later, these findings are still
true. In 2000, of 18 modern-dance choreographers who received grants
from the National Endowment for the Arts, 13 were men. The men received
a total of $200,000, with a typical grant of $10,000; the women received
a total of $45,000, with a typical grant of $5,000."
Women's Employment
in Publishing and the News Media
The
Times is not a-changin'
www.wellesley.edu/womensreview/archive/2004/11/
highlt.html#caplan
A
study by Paula Caplan and Mary Ann Palko proves what we've always suspected:
women's voices are woefully underrepresented in the pages of the New
York Times Book Review , the most powerful publication in the world
of book publishing. In 53 weeks of the NYTBR in 2002-03, out of 807
books reviewed, only 28% were authored by women. Of the 775 reviews,
only 34% were by women reviewers. Read the report, including excerpts
of correspondence with the Book Review editors, on the site
of the Women's Review of Books.
The
Glass Ceiling in the Executive Suite:
www.annenbergpublicpolicycenter.org/02_reports_releases/
report_by_category.htm#informsoc
The
3rd Annual Annenberg Public Policy Center Analysis of Women Leaders
in Communication Companies shows that women still comprise just 15%
of executive leaders and just 12% of board members in top communications
companies - numbers virtually unchanged from the previous year.
The Talk
of the Rest of the Town By
Dennis Loy Johnson
http://mobylives.com/NYer_survey.html
Johnson
details the lackluster representation of women in the pages of The New
Yorker .
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