The first-ever exhibition in Israel by acclaimed American artist and feminist icon Judy Chicago, organized in joint collaboration between the Nassima Landau Art Foundation and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, will open on September 18 at two locations. Tel Aviv Museum showcases Chicago’s latest participatory project “What If Women Ruled the World?” and Nassima Landau Gallery presents her early works, alongside drawings and textile pieces. udy Chicago, one of the most influential figures in contemporary art, has inspired generations of women. Over six decades, she has engaged with gender, identity, the body, social and political justice, environmental awareness, and the rewriting of history from a female perspective. Chicago’s art is aimed at making women’s experiences visible, recounting and preserving their stories, and critiquing power structures and various forms of social injustice. Chicago’s latest participatory project titled “What If Women Ruled the World?”, featuring the founding member of the activist group “Pussy Riot” Nadya Tolokonnikova, invites audiences worldwide to answer questions raised by the artists and to add their voices to a physical and digital quilt woven from the responses of all participants. After stops in the United States, Mexico, Argentina, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, the project will make its debut in the Middle East. The Tel Aviv Museum of Art invites its viewers to step into an interactive booth, respond to questions, and take part in the work’s latest chapter. In an exhibition surveying Judy Chicago’s sixty-year career, the Nassima Landau Art Foundation presents early works from a private collection that preceded Chicago’s breakthrough, alongside drawings and textile pieces from her iconic installation “The Dinner Party” and works exploring the artist’s Jewish identity. Focusing on Judy Chicago’s print-based works, the exhibition delves into the creative process of one of the most innovative artists of our time.