Making art as a woman in a patriarchal society

May 26, 2026

Making Art as a Woman in a Patriarchal

Society

There’s a particular kind of courage in making art as a woman.

Not the loud, headline kind (though sometimes we need that too). I mean the everyday

courage of taking your inner life seriously — in a world that has historically dismissed

women’s inner lives as “too emotional,” “too much,” “not important,” or “not real

work.”

To paint, write, sculpt, photograph, stitch, build — to create anything — is to say: my

experience is worthy of form. And in a patriarchal society, that statement can feel

quietly radical.

The invisible rules we’re taught

Many of us grow up absorbing unspoken instructions:

Be pleasing, not powerful

Be talented, but don’t take up too much space

Be ambitious, but don’t intimidate anyone

Be expressive, but not “messy”

Be confident, but not “full of yourself”

And then we walk into the art world — a space that can be breathtakingly open, and yet

still shaped by the same old hierarchies.

Even now, women’s work is more likely to be described with words like pretty, delicate,

decorative, feminine — as if those are smaller categories. As if beauty is trivial. As if

tenderness is weakness. As if emotion is not a serious intellectual force.

But emotion is not a flaw in art. It’s one of its greatest technologies.

The “permission” problem

One of the most exhausting things about patriarchy is how it trains women to wait for

permission.

Permission to call ourselves artists. Permission to charge properly. Permission to be

seen. Permission to be taken seriously.

We’re taught to qualify everything:

“It’s just a little painting.”

“I’m not a real artist, but…”

“I’m still learning.”

Meanwhile, men are often socialised to assume legitimacy first — and refine later.

This isn’t about blaming individuals. It’s about naming a system that shapes confidence,

visibility, and opportunity.

And naming it matters, because once you can see the pattern, you can stop mistaking it

for a personal failing.

The body in the studio

Being a woman isn’t only an identity — it’s a lived, physical reality.

For many women, creating work happens alongside:Caregiving

Emotional labour

The mental load

Safety considerations

Hormonal cycles

Chronic stress or fatigue

And yet the myth of the “serious artist” is still often built around a very specific figure:

someone with uninterrupted time, uninterrupted confidence, and uninterrupted

permission.

So sometimes the most feminist thing you can do is make the work anyway.

Not perfectly. Not constantly. Not in a way that fits anyone else’s timeline.

But truthfully.

Anger, softness, joy — all of it belongs

Patriarchy is uncomfortable with women’s full range.

It’s uncomfortable with our anger because anger is power. It’s uncomfortable with our

softness because softness is influence. It’s uncomfortable with our joy because joy is

freedom.

Art gives us a place to hold all of it without apology.

Sometimes I think of painting as a way of refusing to shrink.

Colour can be a declaration. Texture can be a record. Scale can be a boundary. A title

can be a truth you’re finally ready to say out loud.

And if your work is vibrant — if it’s emotionally honest — if it’s bold — that can be its

own form of resistance.

Money, value, and the politics of being paid

Let’s talk about the part no one romanticises: money.

Patriarchal systems don’t just shape who gets celebrated — they shape who gets paid.

Women are often encouraged to treat creative work as a hobby, a side project,

something “nice.” We’re praised for passion, but discouraged from claiming value.

But pricing your work properly isn’t greed.

It’s sustainability. It’s respect. It’s saying: this labour counts.

And yes, it can feel vulnerable to put a number on something that came from your

heart.

Still: your heart is not a reason to undercharge.

Finding your people (and building your own room)

Patriarchy isolates. It thrives when women compete for scarce attention.

So one of the most healing things you can do is find community:

Other women artists

Collectors who buy with intention

Curators who understand your work beyond aestheticsFriends who don’t flinch when you succeedAnd if you can’t find the room you need, you can build it — slowly, bravely, piece by

piece.

A newsletter can be a room. An Instagram post can be a room. A studio practice can be

a room. A body of work can be a room.

Virginia Woolf wrote about a room of one’s own. Many of us are still making that room

— not just physically, but emotionally, financially, creatively.

The truth: the work changes the world (and it changes

you)

Making art as a woman in a patriarchal society isn’t only about fighting something.

It’s also about returning to yourself.

It’s about listening to your instincts when the world tells you not to. It’s about trusting

your eye. It’s about letting your experience become colour, shape, movement, story.

And it’s about remembering that art has always been one of the ways women survive.

Not by becoming harder. But by becoming more honest. More alive. More present.

If you’re a woman making art right now, I want you to know this:

You don’t need permission. You don’t need to be palatable. You don’t need to be

smaller.

You only need to keep making the work.

Because every time you create, you’re not just producing an object.

You’re claiming space. You’re telling the truth. You’re leaving evidence that you were

here — and that your inner life mattered.

 

About the author

Caroline Boff

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