 I've been asked to define myself as a feminist or feminist artist. Actually, it was, am I considering myself a feminist or a feminist artist? And I hate that question. Just hate that question. All I know is that I had four kids, an art career, and was engaged in this burgeoning feminist movement. The time when the world was up in flames in 1968. The culture at large was totally falling apart at that time. I was in the generation of Jansen's history of art where there were no women and who said that we're not prejudged by gender. I don't like being labeled. It's sort of a very easy way to dismiss people. Male artists, they've never had to worry about their gender as a creative negative ever. So now having said that, I will continue and just say I am a woman, I'm an art maker, and I'm not embarrassed to take feminism as a political position. Feminism over the past 30 years sort of changed, not sort of, it did. It changed the way we think, and I don't like to think of it in the past tense either. It still continues to be changing from one generation to the other.