Featured Artists:
Sarah Gjertson
Blake Ballard
Jordan Bigelow
Alex Blom
Justin Bravo
Karen Finley
Kristin Fleishmann Brewer
Daniel Goldstein
Guerrilla Girls
Syd Lee
Clare Link-Oberstar
Wangui Maina
Katherine Ross
Hollis Sigler
Lindsay Smith Gustave
Faith Williams
Anne Wilson
F*Bomb
Sarah Gjertson:
Influences and Legacies
Vicki Myhren Gallery
2024
F*BOMB, featuring the artwork of long- time University of Denver professor Sarah Gjertson alongside a sampling of her influences, mentors, and students. This exhibition stretches beyond the traditional boundaries of a retrospective, instead tracing personal and artistic lineages through generations. This curatorial approach, suggested by Gjertson, parallels a community- centered ethos that grounds her artistic practice and approach as an educator, foregrounding connections across time, space, and people.
Inspired by feminist, anti-authoritarian, punk, and DIY subcultures, Gjertson thoughtfully deploys both humor and tenderness, disruption and community-building, to make visible the stories and voices of women “traversing the complex and conflicting expectations they experience living in American culture.” Gjertson’s work critiques gendered stereotypes, encourages individuals to use their voices, and invites expressions of anger, frustration, activism, and satire to disrupt and reimagine the world.
Gjertson and the artists in this exhibition play with various materials and processes, presenting engaging works that often employ revisionist methods of making. Crossing boundaries between “high” and “low” art forms, and experiences of comfort/discomfort, their art encourages dialogue and challenges societal norms of respectability. F*BOMB celebrates the subversive, boisterous, funny, personal, and political. Perhaps most importantly, it locates Gjertson and her work within an extended legacy of transformative and empowering art making practice, acknowledging those who came before and those who come after.
U.N.I.T.Y (Let’s Change the Conversation)
2022-2024
Wood panel and acrylic paint
The title, “U.N.I.T.Y” references a song by Queen Latifah, which discusses the unifying sense of community amongst women that is a result of shared experiences with sexual abuse and harassment. The open heads of the silhouettes prompt viewers to put themselves into the shoes of an SA survivor or of their support system and digest the emotions that arise trying to navigate this conversation. This work aims to evoke empathy and provide a platform to address these difficult conversations often frowned upon. The back side of the artwork is interactive and features shared experiences of SA, creating a real space for these personal conversations to be shared and voices often suppressed to be heard.

