"Filled with a wide array of illustrations, this book offers a fresh perspective on surrealism as it spotlights the important role that North American women artists played in the movement. The
surrealist movement in art is most often identified with maleartists, many of whom objectified women in their paintings, casting them as sexual or symbolic ideals. Conversely, the female
artists of the movement delved primarily into their own subconscious and dreams. This volume features the work of 48 Mexican andU.S.-based women artists whose contributions to the surrealist
movement span more than four decades and whose work was both influential and radical in its own right. Thematically arranged, it includes more than 250 full-color images along with several
essays exploring the effects of geography and gender on the movement. This unique book illustrates surrealism as a gateway to self-discovery, especially in North America, where women artists
were freed from oppressive European traditions and the vagaries ofwar. From 1931, the year of Lee Miller's first surreal photograph, to 1968, when Yayoi Kusama presented her landmark happening
"Alice in Wonderland" in New York's Central Park, the artists and works depicted here are both significant and extraordinary intheir explorations of personal and universal truths"--