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A Woman's Place is at Heinz History Center with new exhibition

A 9,000-square-foot exhibition showcases the important contributions of women in Pittsburgh and throughout western Pa., with displays dedicated to journalists, activists, politicians, athletes, and many others. Hez History Center in Pittsburgh has launched its newest exhibition, A Woman's Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh, which includes over 250 artifacts, objects, photos, and documents from women who have made an immeasurable impact but their stories are often overlooked. The exhibition, which opened on March 23 in observance of Women's History Month, includes original sketches of Oscar the Grouch and Mr. Snuffleupagus by Penny Owens Skillen, a Carnegie Tech alumna who helped create Sesame Street. Other notable figures include journalist Nellie Bly, whose alligator-skin satchel and bonnet are displayed alongside the alligator skin satchel she traveled around the world with in 72 days. The exhibit aims to challenge visitors' ideas about women’s history in the region, showcasing it as “complicated and varied” and reflects the reality that you don't have to be a barrier breaker for it to matter.

A Woman's Place is at Heinz History Center with new exhibition

Published : 4 weeks ago by Rachel Wilkinson in

The 9,000-square-foot exhibition — described in a press release as displaying over 250 artifacts, objects, photos, and documents from “entrepreneurs and activists, artists and athletes, scientists and inventors, and change-makers and barrier breakers" — opened on March 23 in observance of Women's History Month. The show examines "women who have made an immeasurable impact" but whose stories are often "overlooked."

Many of the original sketches of Oscar the Grouch and Mr. Snuffleupagus penned by Penny Owens Skillen, a Carnegie Tech alumna who helped create Sesame Street are being publicly displayed for the first time.

At Heinz History Center’s newest exhibition, A Woman’s Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh , visitors should expect to encounter familiar and unfamiliar faces.The 9,000-square-foot exhibition — described in a press release as displaying over 250 artifacts, objects, photos, and documents from “entrepreneurs and activists, artists and athletes, scientists and inventors, and change-makers and barrier breakers" — opened on March 23 in observance of Women's History Month. The show

Satchel and bonnet of Nellie Bly, part of A Woman’s Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh at Heinz History Center. Rosie is

But as senior curator Leslie Przybylek explains, western Pennsylvania was home to many “real life Rosies” who worked in steel mills and other defense jobs to aid the war effort as men served abroad, even as they “were largely going to give up those jobs when the war was done.” Today, Carnegie Mellon University’s Girls of Steel Robotics team has incorporated Rosie as part of their mascot, who also appears in the exhibition. “What does that mean?” Przybylek asks. “And how did we get to the point where a World War II era figure that had a very complicated backstory has become this symbol of empowerment?”

Nellie Bly display, part of A Woman’s Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh at Heinz History Center. Among the more famous figures is journalist Nellie Bly , honored with a banner draped alongside the alligator-skin satchel she traveled around the world with in 72 days (the object is a museum staff favorite). Standing on a platform of faux bricks with an arm flexed is Rosie the Riveter, who looks surprisingly petite in her cuffed denim shirt and jeans.Rosie is an icon, not a real person , originating from a World War II motivational poster first produced in a Pittsburgh-based Westinghouse factory in 1942. Her red, white, and blue ensemble was meant to evoke the American flag.But as senior curator Leslie Przybylek explains, western Pennsylvania was home to many “real life Rosies” who worked in steel mills and other defense jobs to aid the war effort as men served abroad, even as they “were largely going to give up those jobs when the war was done.” Today, Carnegie Mellon University’s Girls of Steel Robotics team has incorporated Rosie as part of their mascot,who also appears in the exhibition.

A Woman’s Place aim to complicate visitors’ ideas about women’s history in the region, showcasing it as “complicated and varied,” Przybylek says. The exhibition is “the story of how women’s history cannot be put into one or two small, neat little boxes.”

“We’re also looking at those stories that reflect the reality that you don't have to be a barrier breaker for your history to matter and for it to be part of the larger stories of Pittsburgh and this place,” Przybylek adds.

A Woman’s Place features an illustrated timeline that begins in 1776 — it kicks off with infamous philanthropist Mary Schenley — and encompasses nearly 250 years of history. Protest banners and objects from Lucy Kennedy Miller and Winifred Meek Morris represent women’s suffrage, and the civil rights movement comes through activists Daisy Lampkin and Brenda Strong Frazier, who also chaired Pittsburgh’s chapter of the National Organization for Women. Other areas covered include the disability rights movement, the second-wave feminist movement of the 1970s, and the campaign to pass the Equal Rights Amendment (with an ERA pin of Frazier’s displayed). Photo: Courtesy of Detre Library & Archives, Gift of the YWCA of Greater Pittsburgh. Members of the YWCA of Greater Pittsburgh at the 20th-anniversary celebration of the 1963 March on Washington, D.C., 1983, part of A Woman’s Place: How Women Shaped Pittsburgh These juxtapositions inaim to complicate visitors’ ideas about women’s history in the region, showcasing it as “complicated and varied,” Przybylek says. The exhibition is “the story of how women’s history cannot be put into one or two small, neat little boxes.”“We’re also looking at those stories that reflect the reality that you don't have to be a barrier breaker for your history to matter and for it to be part of the larger stories of Pittsburgh and this place,” Przybylek adds.features an illustrated timeline that begins in 1776 — it kicks off with infamous philanthropist Mary Schenley — and encompasses nearly 250 years of history. Protest banners and objects from Lucy Kennedy Miller and Winifred Meek Morris represent women’s suffrage, and the civil rights movement comes through activists Daisy Lampkin and Brenda Strong Frazier, who also chaired Pittsburgh’s chapter of the National Organization for Women. Other areas covered include the disability rights movement, the second-wave feminist movement of the 1970s, and the campaign to pass the Equal Rights Amendment (with an ERA pin of Frazier’s displayed).

Beyond the exhibition's timeline, artifacts are arranged in six, non-linear thematic sections reflecting different aspects of local women’s history. Near the display of Bly — who departed for her 25,000-mile journey in 1889 — sits a purple pantsuit worn by Chiller Theater ’s Donna Rae, “the girl with the terminal stare,” in 1977, and a red skirt suit worn by Uniontown journalist Nina Pineda on air as she covered the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

The asynchronous artifacts reveal women’s history progressing in fits and starts. For example, the exhibition’s sports section includes artifacts from Louise Fulton, “a homegrown pioneer” from East Liberty, who, according to curator Emily Ruby, was among the first Black women to compete on a professional bowling tour and the first Black person to win a professional bowling tournament. The section also jumps back to July 1870, when two 16-year-old girls held a competitive rowing match on the Monongahela River, making front-page news and drawing 10,000 spectators.

“So you would think, does this mark the beginning of women's participation in this sport? It really doesn’t,” Ruby says.

Similarly, a baseball glove worn by Betsy Jochum, a player for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, appears. Though the league was widely popular in the 1940s and 50s, after its closure, it was largely forgotten until the 1992 hit film A League of Their Own (also revived as

“We’ll talk about this kind of ebb and flow, this opportunity, and then this kind of disappearance,” Ruby says of the exhibition, noting it was often the case that fell to barrier-breaking women to “organize and [fight] for the opportunity to participate.”

It’s with some feminist guilt that I found the clothing on display to be the most evocative part of the exhibition, as it spans so many spheres of women’s influence.

“There will be a wedding dress, but there will also be a military combat outfit. There will be a union T-shirt,” Przybylek told visitors.

Museum-goers can glimpse the inauguration dress donned by

By contrast, a display honors western Pa. women who impacted the region's food scene. Honored are the specialty food stores established by the and the McKees Rocks institution Pierogies Plus , complete with a brown suit and rolling pin.

The exhibition ends with a reminder that what people see is not static with an end point, but rather a living history and still actively gathering stories. Visitors are invited to leave feedback or The exhibition ends with a reminder that what people see is not static with an end point, but rather a living history and still actively gathering stories. Visitors are invited to leave feedback or contribute to the History Center’s collection The asynchronous artifacts reveal women’s history progressing in fits and starts. For example, the exhibition’s sports section includes artifacts from Louise Fulton, “a homegrown pioneer” from East Liberty, who, according to curator Emily Ruby, was among the first Black women to compete on a professional bowling tour and the first Black person to win a professional bowling tournament. The section also jumps back to July 1870, when two 16-year-old girls held a competitive rowing match on the Monongahela River, making front-page news and drawing 10,000 spectators.“So you would think, does this mark the beginning of women's participation in this sport? It really doesn’t,” Ruby says.Similarly, a baseball glove worn by Betsy Jochum, a player for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, appears. Though the league was widely popular in the 1940s and 50s, after its closure, it was largely forgotten until the 1992 hit film(also revived as a Pittsburgh-shot streaming series in 2022).“We’ll talk about this kind of ebb and flow, this opportunity, and then this kind of disappearance,” Ruby says of the exhibition, noting it was often the case that fell to barrier-breaking women to “organize and [fight] for the opportunity to participate.”It’s with some feminist guilt that I found the clothing on display to be the most evocative part of the exhibition, as it spans so many spheres of women’s influence.“There will be a wedding dress, but there will also be a military combat outfit. There will be a union T-shirt,” Przybylek told visitors.Museum-goers can glimpse the inauguration dress donned by Sophie Masloff , Pittsburgh’s first and only female mayor to date, and the city’s first Jewish mayor. Not far off is a 1969 Oscar de la Renta aluminum-thread bikini; initially scandalous, the swimsuit was commissioned by Alcoa to expand its market.By contrast, a display honors western Pa. women who impacted the region's food scene. Honored are the specialty food stores established by the McGinnis sisters

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