@inbook{30ef919b8ece4097a6ec917b28b82542,
title = "New Perspectives and Reflections on Women Can't Paint: Gender, the Glass Ceiling and Values in Contemporary Art",
abstract = "This paper brings new perspectives and reflections upon the research carried out for my book Women Can{\textquoteright}t Paint: Gender, the Glass Ceiling and Values in Contemporary Art (G{\o}rrill, 2020) published by Bloomsbury. My PhD and book{\textquoteright}s title were inspired by the German painter Georg Baselitz{\textquoteright}s infamous statement about our female creatives “What{\textquoteright}s the biggest problem withwomen artists? None of them can actually paint!” (Clark, 2013). And Women Can{\textquoteright}t Paint was conceived, firstly as a PhD to prove sufficient, robust evidence that Baselitz is wrong, and then as a book encompassing a far wider geography than the original research. It is important to remember that Baselitz based his judgement on the economic value of artworks: “Womendon{\textquoteright}t pass the test, the market test – the value test” (Beyer & Knofel, 2015), because there are significant gender value gaps in contemporary art, of up to ninety per cent between female and male artists.",
keywords = "Women Can{\textquoteright}t Paint, gender, Contemporary female art, market values, market tests",
author = "Helen Gorrill",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
isbn = "9788854914476",
pages = "203--220",
editor = "Nicotra, {Alfio } and Vecchio, {Gianluca }",
booktitle = "La Donna e l'Arte",
publisher = "Libero Italy",
}