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All I Want
Over 240 artworks by more than 40 women: Explore the new exhibition celebrating Portuguese women artists from 1900 to 2020
In collaboration with the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon
Where are all the women?
Why we need to celebrate women artists from history
Putting Forgotten Women Back in the Frame
Celebrating these overlooked artists today
7 Artists You Should Know
A Timeline of Portuguese Women Artists
Why it's important
An expert-eye-view of the 'All I Want' exhibition
Introducing the All I Want Project
Hear about this project commissioned by the Minister of Culture to highlight the important contributions of women artists
No Longer Invisible
Graça Fonseca, Minister of Culture of Portugal, speaks about the importance of the exhibition
How do you want to explore?
Three different ways to discover the new exhibition
1
By Theme
Discover the topics
2
By Artist
Meet the women
3
By Artwork
Browse the art
"Of the 40 artists selected for this exhibition, only six gained recognition in the first half of the century, providing a clear picture of the disparity that characterised this period."
Helena de Freitas and Bruno Marchand, curators
The 14 sections of 'All I Want'
Go room-by-room in the exhibition
#1
Starting Point
A conversation between artists from several generations and styles
#2
The Place of the Artist
Exploring the position of artists a century ago vs now
#3
Feminine Plural
Discussions about the female body and eroticism
#4
The Gaze and the Mirror
How women look to themselves and others
#5
The Word
Artists using letters, words, and phrases in their work
#6
The Writing Space
A look at the literature of great Portuguese artists
#7
Construction
The politics and social nature of design and architecture
#8
Le Vivant
The balance between ecology and art
#9
The House
The symbolic relationship between women and their living space
#10
The Political
Artworks with political themes or topics
#11
Collective Memories
Considering Portuguese cultural heritage
#12
Vernacular Daily Life
How daily life impacts women
#13
The Theater of the Body
How women contradict the male domination of the female body
#14
Listen To Me
Audio stories about the fusion between the artwork and the artist
Explore by color
Reds
Blues
Greens
Yellows
Blacks
The introduction
Discover the connection between the artworks and learn more about each artist
Starting Point
Meet four artists from across the generations
Explore the theme
Aurélia de Sousa: Expressive Naturalism
The experience of being a woman at the turn of the 20th century are key to understanding her work
Rosa Ramalho's Playful Pottery
The most renowned creator of Figurado de Barcelos
The Surrealist Sculptures of Susanne Themlitz
Combining mediums to create a personal microcosm
Breaking Down Boundaries with Luisa Cunha
Explore her attentiveness to what is around us
Maria Helena Vieira da Silva's Unceasing Dialogue with Portugal
A prominent figure within the School of Paris
Make a gallery at home with AR
See these important artworks from a new perspective with augmented reality
The artist is missing
Two artists removing women's objectified bodies
The Place of the Artist
The same subject examined by artists a century apart
Explore the theme
Rosa Carvalho on Representation
The artist on how women and the female body have been represented in art history
Armanda Duarte's Spatial Poetics
Observation and analysis of space to search for the essence
What does it mean to be feminine?
Feminine Plural
Subtlety vs provocation: artists from various generations approach the idea of the 'feminine'
Explore the theme
Mily Possoz's Strong Sensual Colors
A prolific painter and renowned engraver
Ana Vidigal: An Obsessive Collector
The "lost and found" in houses, attics, shops and fairs
Maria Antónia Siza: Unknown for Half a Century
The tragical brief life of Siza was marked by beauty, humor, depression, and anguish
Ofélia Marques and the Portuguese Modernist Movement
A self-taught visual artist born in the early 20th century
Patrícia Garrido's Voluptuous Models
An artist with a discreet presence in the national art scene
Maria José Aguiar in Contemporary Portuguese Production
Experimentalism, freedom and irreverence
Snapshots
Browse the photography
Untitled (Ref. #5)
Helena Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Sandie)
Patrícia Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Sauna)
Patrícia Almeida
Inhabited drawing
Helena Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Kiss)
Patrícia Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Holiday apartments)
Patrícia Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Megaphone)
Patrícia Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Wave pool)
Patrícia Almeida
Series "Portobello" (Bellavista)
Patrícia Almeida
The house
Helena Almeida
See through their eyes
How the artists reflect their individuality
The Gaze and the Mirror
Artists who recognise and invent themselves in the act of looking
Explore the theme
Sarah Afonso's Intimate Portraits
Sarah is considered a "new case" of modernist painting by some art critics
Maria José Oliveira and Dual Concern
Her work is sustained by the double attention to the body and nature
Zoom in
Put together the pieces of these collages
The word on the street
Looking at the Written Form in Art
These artists create visual dimensions with letters and words
Explore the theme
Ana Hatherly: A Painter Who Drifts Towards Literature
Tapping into puns, repetition, codes, mazes and copy
Lourdes Castro's Penchant for Letters
Meet one of the founders of the magazine KWY
Salette Tavares: Spanning Genres
Playful and poetic visuals that defy and subvert the rules of language
Inês Botelho: Eminently Sculptural
Results that are as precise as they are impossible
The power of text
Where literature and art meet
The Writing Space
Deep dive into the literary production of great Portuguese artists
Explore the theme
Isabel Carvalho Explores Language As a Cultural Construction
Breaking down boundaries between high and popular culture
Joana Rosa: Form Over Content
She bases her work on doodles or scribbles
Building new meanings
The power of architecture and design
Construction
The politics and social aspect of design and architecture in Portuguese artists
Explore the theme
Fernanda Fragateiro: Works That Spark Performative Action
Crossing sculpture, installation and architecture
Ângela Ferreira's Sculptural Revisiting of the Recent Past
The artist's own life story is woven into her work
See the installations
A World of Illusions
Grada Kilomba
From the top, a Cycle
Inês Botelho
Milieu – Dining Room
Ana Vieira
head, torso and limbs
Armanda Duarte
19 degree rotation, translation and lead
Inês Botelho
Ghost Wagon Memorial (Flags)
Carla Filipe
Pronouns
Ana Vieira
(Demo)
Fernanda Fragateiro
Hello!
Luisa Cunha
Hello!
Luisa Cunha
It's alive!
Bringing nature and living things into the gallery
Le Vivant
Summoning living elements to the interior of the room
Explore the theme
Gabriela Albergaria's Cosmovision
Pushing back against the finiteness of natural resources
Maria Capelo: Rekindling, Not Reproducing
Depicting landscapes in an ancient and universal tradition
Where we live and hide
The House
Our complex relationship to Home Sweet Home
Explore the theme
Ana Vieira's Ghosts
Works where the public find themselves expecting a scene that never happens
The hidden meanings
Politics hiding in plain sight
The Political
Voices rise up in unison
Explore the theme
Carla Filipe Examines Cross-Cutting Issues
Her work draws upon the vital energy of the streets
Graça Morais: Steeped in the Rural Mythology of Trás-os-Montes
Her bucolic childhood fuelled a rich world of images
Telling stories
Movies and installations that represent women in Portugal's legacy
Collective Memories
A closer look at the women's perspective
Explore the theme
Grada Kilomba on Telling Stories
Kilomba draws upon her roots in Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe
Maria Lamas Portrays the Living Conditions of Working Portuguese Women
Her book can be considered one most important documents about the women in the country
Filipa César: Dictatorship, Oppression and Colonialism
César's recent filmography reflects on the contemporary history of Portugal
The daily routine
Objects that belong to our day-to-day lives, but with a new meaning
Vernacular Daily Life
How does daily life impact women?
Explore the theme
The Opposites of Joana Vasconcelos
Her work plays with stereotypes and clichés
Sónia Almeida Examines Painting as Language
Intense, vibrant colours, applied in saturated smears and layers
Patrícia Almeida: Contemporary Reality
Her photography emerged from her interest in romantic literature, pop-rock music and urban counter-cultures
Discover the self portraits
Border Patrol: Self-Portrait with Lila, reflection and Ana
Paula Rego
Self-Portrait
Aurélia de Sousa
Untitled (Self-Portrait)
Aurélia de Sousa
Saint Anthony (Self-Portrait)
Aurélia de Sousa
Self-portrait
Maria José Oliveira
Not just any body
The Theater of the Body
The female body and how women contradict the male domination of it
Explore the theme
The Self-Taught Artistry of Menez
One of the most cited artists in visual arts and literature
Paula Rego's Portrayals of Classic Literature
The artist is both character and narrator of the stories behind her paintings
All the senses
Listen To Me
Audio pieces representing the fusion between the artwork and the artist
Explore the theme
Helena Almeida's 3D Artworks
Thinking about the body in the space
Explore more...
Exhibits
Over 50 stories to explore
Artworks
Over 240 images to explore
See the Full Collection
Explore the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum
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