Accession Number
73476
Medium
Gouache and ink with collage on off-white Japanese paper
Dimensions
61 × 50 cm (24 1/16 × 19 11/16 in.)
Classification
collage
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by the Woman's Board
Background & Context
Background Story
This 1970 collage by Nancy Spero represents the American feminist artist at a pivotal moment in her career, the work combining gouache, ink, and collage on off-white Japanese paper to create an image that explores the limits of language, sexuality, and representation with the raw intensity that characterized her most powerful work. The title, which translates from French as "with what impossible...," suggests both the impossibility of complete expression and the struggle to articulate experience that exceeds the capacity of words, the fragmentary text becoming a vehicle for emotional and political content. The technique is characteristic of Spero's collage practice: fragments of text and image are assembled on the delicate Japanese paper, the fragility of the support contrasting with the force of the message, the physical vulnerability of the material suggesting the vulnerability of the bodies and voices that Spero sought to represent. The 1970 date places this work in the period of Spero's exile in Paris and her increasing engagement with French feminist theory, the collages reflecting both the influence of Kristeva and Cixous and the artist's own experience as a woman artist in a male-dominated art world. Art historians have connected this collage to the broader tradition of feminist art, from the performance works of Valie Export to the text-based investigations of Barbara Kruger, noting that Spero's treatment is more fragmentary, more focused on the failure of language than the direct political address of these contemporaries. The work also demonstrates Spero's mastery of collage as a medium for political critique: the assembled fragments create a visual rhythm that suggests both the fragmentation of women's experience and the possibility of reassembling that experience into new forms.
Cultural Impact
This 1970 collage made French-feminist linguistic impossibility physically fragile through off-white Japanese paper fragmentation, using gouache-ink text-image assembly to transform language failure into political reassembly possibility.
Why It Matters
It matters because Spero glued words and images together and made the paper feel like it was whispering secrets—proving that even fragments could shout if the collage was honest enough.