Artwork Details
- Title
- Immolation, from the portfolio “On Fire”
- Artist
- Date
- 1972, printed 2013
- Location
- Dimensions
- image: 16 × 16 in. (40.6 × 40.6 cm) sheet: 24 × 24 in. (61 × 61 cm)
- Credit Line
- Museum Purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment
- Mediums Description
- inkjet print on paper
- Classifications
- Object Number
- 2018.11.6
Artwork Description
Judy Chicago's Atmospheres are pyrotechnic performances that temporarily alter and animate the landscape through explosions of brilliant color. A pathbreaking feminist artist, Chicago developed the Atmospheres in the late 1960s, in response to prominent male artists who favored a vocabulary of cutting, digging, and displacement when working in the land. By contrast, Chicago uses colored smoke and flares, "never to dominate but rather to transform--not to overpower, but to change . . ." Upon creating the first Atmosphere, she observed, "the whole world was feminized--if only for a moment."
After Chicago launched the country's first feminist art program at Fresno State College in 1970, her Atmospheres shifted towards woman-centric imagery, with students participating as performers. Their bodies painted in vivid color, the women ritualistically acted out primal scenes of inventing fire and igniting spiritual energy.












