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Gender in the Gallery: Who Gets to Be Art?

I have been the subject.

Not on a gallery wall, perhaps, but in the silent gaze of strangers, in the way a figure is reduced to outline — hips, curve, expression — before it is seen as person.
The body as art.
The body as meaning.
The body as symbol.

I have also been the artist — brush in hand, colour under nail, trying to make space for something real. Something unscripted.
But even then, I feel the weight of tradition.
The rules are quiet, but everywhere.

They tell me what sells.
What is “tasteful.”
What belongs in a frame.

And often, it is not the truth.

As a woman artist, I walk into spaces that call themselves free — open, expressive, boundless — but I know their boundaries by heart.
I know what kind of bodies are invited to become art.
I know what kind of pain is permitted to be portrayed — and what is dismissed as “too much,” “too raw,” “too angry.”
I know that commissions come with an unspoken brief:
Make it beautiful. But don’t make it uncomfortable.
Make it emotional, but not disruptive.
Make it political — but only if the politics have already won.

And so I ask:
Is art still self-expression, when the structures around it demand self-containment?

I choose my subjects from the world around me — women waiting in sun, bodies navigating hostile rooms, the weariness of aging, the quiet grief of being unheard.
But when I bring them to canvas, I still feel resistance.
Not from the paint — but from the system.

A gallery may hang your work, but not always your truth.

I long for art that doesn’t ask for permission.
Art that doesn’t need to explain why this body is worthy of depiction.
I long for imagination to return — not just fantasy, but the radical act of picturing lives beyond the limits of what has been seen before.

Because yes, I have been the subject.
Yes, I am the artist.
But I am also a witness — to how often the two are made to stay apart.

And all I want is to close that gap.
To create something uninvited, unfiltered, unapproved — but undeniable.

About Author /

Deepika Rai is a PhD research scholar at Himachal Pradesh University, Shimla, India. She has written a handful of short stories and research articles. Her first story "Not Until She Gets It Back" was published in The Tribune, “Nomad” in Fiction Quest and her recent story "Standing on the 26th stair was published in prestigious The Statesman. Deepika has been working as a freelance content writer for a long time. An art lover, she has also worked as a teacher, and pencil sketching is one of her hobbies. Besides her teaching and research career, she has two art exhibitions to her credit.

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