
Grace Hartigan, The King Is Dead [Hartigan said The King is Picasso]
Of course there is a publication with all the paintings and there is a quite good 15 minute film that has interviews with the women in the show or those who knew them. The candid photos the women in their studios and at play suggest that were “out there”: smoking, partying, working hard and having clear, engaging thoughts about their work and the work of others. Several state that San Francisco was a far less macho, discriminatory work for women than New York City.

Perle Fine’s small abstraction. Most of the work in the show is quite large.
It may not be possible to “pop” over to Denver but if you find yourself here, it is a terrific show. And right next store, in the Clyfford Still Museum, is a room dedicated to work he made in San Francisco while a teach at the San Francisco Institute of Art where he served as a mentor for some of the women in the show, someone to learn from but hardly imitate as these women artists found voices of their own.