
It's a New Age
<p>Sue Williams’s darkly sarcastic caricature paintings address tough topics such as domestic violence, rape, pornography, and misogyny. In such early paintings as <em>It’s A New Age</em>, characteristic scrawls, doodles, erasures, graphic representations of the body, and text convey the artist’s own scathingly critical thoughts. Her voice, which takes the form of transcribed, seemingly unedited notes, addresses her identity as both a woman and a painter. Willams uses verbal puns and scatological imagery to comment on the degradation of the female body—through sexual violence and abuse—and the psychological trauma of self-loathing. The artist parodies the politics of “choice”—she declares in the painting that she is “free to choose” and “I chose fat thighs”—by articulating personal struggle.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1992
- Dimensions
- 162.6 × 137.2 cm (64 × 54 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Sue Williams
Artist

Painting
Sue Williams is an American painter and sculptor working with abstraction and figuration to investigate the relationship between bodily experience and pictorial space. Born in 1954, her practice emerged in the postwar period through an engagement with gestural abstraction and material experimentation.
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More by Sue Williams
Expanding
2002 · Ink on synthetic polymer sheet
Mom's Foot Blue and Orange
1997 · Oil and acrylic on canvas
Empathy Displacement/Loopy in Blue and Orange
1997 · Oil and acrylic on canvas
Highway to Heaven
1993 · Etching, aquatint, and photoetching
My Landlord
1992 · Cut-and-pasted printed and painted paper with ink, pencil, and pressure-sensitive tape on paper
Catwoman
1990 · Screenprint on off-white wove paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Sue Williams
- Year
- 1992
- Dimensions
- 162.6 × 137.2 cm (64 × 54 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1992-113982
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





