Jude Burkhauser (10 September 1947 – 19 September 1998) was an American artist, museum curator and researcher born into a blue-collar family in Trenton, New Jersey.
Glasgow Girls Exhibition, 1990
Jude Burkhauser is best known for bringing together the widely acclaimed Glasgow Girls exhibition held at
Glasgow Kelvingrove Museum in 1990 and for editing the accompanying exhibition catalogue, ''Glasgow Girls: Women in Art and Design 1880-1920.'' The retrospective exhibition brought together the talents of women artists and designers who gathered around
Glasgow School of Art
The Glasgow School of Art (GSA; gd, Sgoil-ealain Ghlaschu) is a higher education art school based in Glasgow, Scotland, offering undergraduate degrees, post-graduate awards (both taught and research-led), and PhDs in architecture, fine art, and ...
between 1880 and 1920. The “Glasgow Girls” included women such as
Jessie Newbery
Jessie Newbery (28 May 1864 – 27 April 1948) was a Scottish artist and embroiderer. She was one of the artists known as the Glasgow Girls. Newbery also created the Department of Embroidery at the Glasgow School of Art where she was able to ...
,
Ann Macbeth
Ann Macbeth (25 September 1875 – 23 March 1948 ) was a British embroiderer, designer, teacher and author, a member of the Glasgow Movement and an associate of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. She was also an active suffragette and designed ba ...
,
Bessie MacNicol
Elizabeth "Bessie" MacNicol (1869–1904) was a Scottish painter and member of the Glasgow Girls group of artists affiliated with the Glasgow School of artists.
Early life and education
MacNicol was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on 5 July 1869, ...
and the sisters
Frances Macdonald
Frances Macdonald MacNair (24 August 1873 – 12 December 1921) was a Scottish artist whose design work was a prominent feature of the Modern Style (British Art Nouveau style) during the 1890s.
Biography
The sister of artist-designer M ...
and
Margaret Macdonald.

In a review, critic Lynne Walker commended Burkhauser for the exhibition's achievement in demonstrating that "much of the powerful visual culture of Glasgow c.1900 was produced by and for women". The exhibition was held in the same year that Glasgow was awarded
City of Culture and was one of the programme's major successes.
Feminist Polemic
Burkhauser arrived at Glasgow School of Art in 1987 on a Rotary International Scholarship to do postgraduate research on the subject of Scottish women artists and remained in the city until 1991. Alongside her profiling of female artists, Burkhauser’s highly publicised falling out with Glasgow Museums, and in particular with the Kelvingrove Museum chief
Julian Spalding
Julian Spalding (born 15 June 1947 in Lewisham, South London) is an English art critic, writer, broadcaster and a former curator. Considered to be a controversial maverick and outspoken critic of the art world, he has frequently contributed to ar ...
, over plans to exhibit the 'Glasgow Girls' internationally added to her fierce reputation and tenacious character. The dispute ended in litigation with Burkhauser eventually creating her own company to produce the exhibition.

The hard-fought battle was a challenge to the perceived masculinity of Glasgow's leading art institutions. In the catalogue, Burkhauser commented that “Young women in the arts have been starved for stories of other women, tales of these maverick sisters whom they might learn from
..We followed in one another’s footsteps, knocking on doors, asking the same questions, rediscovering fire, the wheel, electricity, because there was no record of our past.” In this respect, the 'Glasgow Girls' exhibition is deemed a triumph in the course of art history for its promotion of Scottish female artists. Burkhauser's dedication to its success was evident in the use of her own property as the insurance to bring Margaret Macdonald's painting ''The Opera of the Seas'' (1915) to Glasgow from Germany. A section of this painting appears on the cover of the published exhibition catalogue.
Artistic career
Burkhauser trained at Moore College of Art from 1965 to 1970. She taught elementary school art in the Hamilton Township N.J. school district from 1970-71. She worked as a children's librarian and as a director at the Ewing Headquarters Library, Mercer County N.J. 1973-1979, having received a Master of Library Science degree from Rutgers University in 1976. She served as a director and artist-in-residence for the North Cape May county art league in New Jersey, 1983-1984. During this period she also founded the Cape May Writers' Co-op and published a book of her own poetry, Giving Sorrow Words, in 1984. As an artist she worked across several media including painting, tapestry and environmental art. She was an established member of the female artists’ group
Guerrilla Girls
Guerrilla Girls is an anonymous group of feminist, female artists devoted to fighting sexism and racism within the art world. The group formed in New York City in 1985 with the mission of bringing gender and racial inequality into focus within t ...
and a strong feminist voice. She had a love for railway architecture and during her years in Cape May, lived in a converted train station which she had restored as a local history library. This formed part of a thesis project for a degree in Library Science studied at Rutgers University. Burkhauser was later commissioned to create an installation in the roof trusses of the
Hielanman’s Umbrella for the
Glasgow Garden Festival
The Glasgow Garden Festival was the third of the five national garden festivals, and the only one to take place in Scotland.
It was held in Glasgow between 26 April and 26 September 1988. It was the first event of its type to be held in the cit ...
in 1988 and the railway history mosaic, now permanently exhibited at
Glasgow Central Station
, symbol_location = gb
, symbol = rail
, image = Main Concourse at Glasgow Central Station.JPG
, caption = The main concourse
, borough = Glasgow, City of Glasgow
, country ...
.
While living in Scotland, Burkhauser enjoyed visiting the eco-village community at
Findhorn
Findhorn ( gd, Inbhir Èir or ''Inbhir Èireann'') is a village in Moray, Scotland. It is located on the eastern shore of Findhorn Bay and immediately south of the Moray Firth. Findhorn is 3 miles (5 km) northwest of Kinloss, and about 5 m ...
in Moray which was a retreat from the troubles she encountered in Glasgow. At Findhorn, she became interested in bark drawing and began working on a series of drawings on Mexican bark paper entitled "The Spirits in the Wood."
Death
Jude Burkhauser died in 1998 from breast cancer, nine days following her 51st birthday.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Burkhauser, Jude
American art curators
Artists from Trenton, New Jersey
1947 births
1998 deaths