Major show about Women’s Suffrage

Fannie Lou Hamer, 1917-1977, photograph 1966, Artist, Charmian Reading, 1930-2014, National Portrait Gallery

The National Portrait Gallery’s mission “is to tell the story of America by portraying the people who shape the nation’s history, development and culture.” Viewers have the opportunity to relish in history in the making. Recently opened at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, “Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence” is a major exhibition examining the history of women’s suffrage in the United States. Remaining on view through January 5, 2020, this expansive show features more than 120 portraits and objects spanning 1832 to 1965 that explore the American suffrage movement and the political challenges women have faced.

“This exhibition aims to place women’s suffrage at the forefront of American history as the movement reveals the complex contours of American character, including persistence,” said Kate Clarke Lemay, historian at the National Portrait Gallery and coordinating curator of the Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative. “‘Votes for Women’ is as much a study of the Constitution as it is a long social history of the activism of largely forgotten women. The exhibition combines portraiture and biography to convey the stories of individuals who challenged norms to place women’s empowerment at the center of America’s promise of equality for all.”

Lucy Stone

The exhibit outlines the more than 80-year movement for women to obtain the right to vote as part of the larger struggle for equality that continued through the 1965 Civil Rights Act and arguably lingers today.

The presentation is divided chronologically and thematically to address Radical Women: 1832–1869,” “Women Activists: 1870–1892,” “The New Woman: 1893–1912,” “Compelling Tactics: 1913–1916,” “Militancy in the American Suffragist Movement: 1917–1919and The Nineteenth Amendment and Its Legacy.

These thematic explorations are complemented by a chronological narrative of visual biographies of some of the movement’s most influential leaders such as, portraits of the movement’s pioneers, notably Susan B. Anthony and abolitionist Sojourner Truth, and 1848 Seneca Falls participants, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucy Stone.

Zitkala-Ša, 22 Feb 1876 – 26 Jan 1938, photograph, by Joseph T. Keiley, 1869 – 1914

Other portraits of activists represent such figures as Victoria Woodhull, the first woman to run for President; Carrie Chapman Catt, who devised successful state-by-state persuasion efforts; Alice Paul, who organized the first-ever march on Washington’s National Mall; and Lucy Burns, who served six different prison sentences for picketing the White House.

The show also sheds light on the racial struggles of the suffrage movement and how African American women, often excluded by white women from the main suffrage organizations, organized for citizenship rights (including the right to vote). Portraits of African American contributors to the movement include – Sarah Remond, who filed one of the earliest lawsuits protesting race segregation; Ida B. Wells, who advocated for federal laws against lynching; and Mary Church Terrell, who established the National Association of Colored Women.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 12 Nov 1815 – 26 Oct 1902 and Susan Brownell Anthony, 15 Feb 1820 – 13 Mar 1906, photograph, c. 1870, by Napoleon Sarony, 9 Mar 1821 – 9 Nov 1896

“While playing a pivotal role in the Smithsonian-wide ‘Because of Her Story’ initiative, this exhibition recognizes that women from all walks of life have made important contributions to American history and culture,” said Kim Sajet, Director of the National Portrait Gallery. “Only a few names are commonly associated with women’s suffrage, but the movement was diverse and spanned several decades. This major museum exhibition seeks to tell a more complete story through portraits of women who represent different races, ages, abilities and fields of endeavor.”

For more in-depth information, see: https://npg.si.edu/exhibition/votes-for-women