Feminist Art Studio Series

Learn about iconic feminist artists and create artwork inspired by them. Taught by PhDs, subject matter experts and professional artists. Sessions meet Fridays at 6:30PM and Saturdays at 5PM.

New York | Washington DC

New York Sessions
311 East 3rd St, NYC

Purchase the Series

Sign up for the entire series or individual sessions


ArtsClub’s Studio Sessions combine art history with art-making in the studio. To make the most of ArtsClub’s Feminist Art Studio Series, we recommend visiting these New York exhibitions, where you can see works in person and gain inspiration for your own painting:

  • Whitney Museum of American Art: Experience the artistic scope of one of America’s leading modern artists, Georgia O’Keeffe. Visit Floor 7 to view a selection of O’Keeffe’s landscape, skull, and flower paintings.

  • Museum of Modern Art (MoMA): Visit Gallery 521 to view Frida Kahlo’s iconic Self Portrait with Cropped Hair (1940). Then, make your way to Floor 2 to view six color field works by the AbEx pioneer Helen Frankenthaler.

  • Brooklyn Museum: Visit the 4th Floor to witness Judy Chicago’s triumphant and daring masterpiece,The Dinner Party. This monumental installation is part of the Brooklyn Museum’s permanent collection, located in their first-of-its-kind Center for Feminist Art.

Washington DC Sessions
1506 19 St, NW, 4th Fl.

Purchase the Series

Sign up for the entire series or individual sessions


ArtsClub’s Studio Sessions combine art history with art-making in the studio. To make the most of ArtsClub’s Feminist Art Studio Series, we recommend visiting these DC exhibitions:

  • Smithsonian American Art Museum: The Smithsonian American Art Museum has the largest public collection of works by Alma Thomas in the world. Head to the 4th Floor to view a selection of her rainbow-hued paintings, including Snoopy – Early Sun Display on Earth (1970), Autumn Leaves Fluttering in the Breeze (1973), Aquatic Gardens (1973), and more.

  • The Hirshhorn Museum: The Hirshhorn Museum’s 2nd Floor features an extensive collection of works by Female Abstract Expressionists, including Lee Krasner, Joan Mitchell, and Helen Frankenthaler.