Clouds (MISOGYNY)
9″ x 12″ each 9″ x 96″ total
oil, acrylic and vinyl letters on wood

The Importance of Arts, Culture & The Creative Process
The arts possess the unique ability to simultaneously present multiple perspectives that can spark challenges, create community or prompt profound questions. As someone recently observed and shared with me, 'Your work makes visible what we are all feeling.' This encapsulates the power of art and the creative process: to bring to the surface the often-unseen or unresolved dichotomies of the human experience – joy and sorrow, strength and vulnerability, humor and anger, beauty and darkness. I believe as a society, especially in this age of extreme opinions, algorithms and the loss of civil discourse, art can speak to the complexities of our shared experiences.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
The Clouds (MISOGYNY) paintings consist of eight clouds painted between Nov. 5 – 12th, 2024. Each painting has a letter embossed on the surface, but hidden in the clouds. Hung in a horizontal line, the paintings spell MISOGYNY. Making these paintings helped me process the disappointment of the 2024 Presidential race and the sexism it brought into focus.

(WEAK) This series of paintings explores the insidious nature of sexism by subtly incorporating misogynistic quotes from recent interviews, speeches, and commercials during the 2024 Presidential campaign and beyond. Each work features a word or phrase, often hidden within the composition. The letters are slightly raised and overlaid with landscapes, patterns, or artifacts, camouflaging the offensive language. This concealment reflects how sexism often operates discreetly, lurking beneath the surface, while simultaneously ever present.

Margaret Murphy is a visual artist and Director of the Center for Visual Arts at Johns Hopkins University. Her artistic practice spans decades, exploring the nature and construction of femininity and sexism within contemporary consumer culture through paintings and mixed media.
Like a sharp comedian dissecting the world around them, her art offers insightful and often provocative commentary on contemporary issues.
Her work has been exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions.
She has been honored with awards and art residencies from the Pollock Krasner Foundation, the Pat Hearn and Colin de Land Foundation, the New Jersey State Arts Council, the MacDowell Colony, PS 122, and Central Michigan University to name a few.
Murphy received her MFA from the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University.

The Creative Process is created with kind support from the Jan Michalski Foundation.