 All right, so how to define feminist art? Well, I find that very difficult to answer, but I think that any woman artist who was out there in the world producing is in a way making a feminist statement. Well, in my own life, I've really had to assert myself to go places in the art world. And feminism is a great big word that means women's rights. I didn't even stop to wait for the right to make art. I just did it. And so in a sense, I am a feminist. And I guess my first serious feminist statement would have come at age three when I would beat my two-year-old brother up. And to this very day, I continue to beat him up. And again, it's me asserting myself. And what I'm trying to say is we can make feminist statements in many ways. It doesn't have to be just through our art. I'm really excited that my video lip is showing in Burning Down the House. It's a 10-minute montage of great movie clips of black women actresses who had to play maids in early Hollywood movies. And we all know that Hollywood has this dreadful history of racism and that we know most black actresses were forced to play the maid. And what I'm trying to say with lip is that yes, unfortunately, a lot of these brilliant women actresses were forced to play the maid, but what a great job they did. And the way they turned the role around and made it their own. So I've shown great sassy, clever moments from clips, from films where the maid is kind of talking back to her boss, her white mistress. And it's interesting that just the interaction between white and black from early 30s movies to the present day, it relates to myself, I'm not white, I'm Aboriginal, my mother is black. And she in fact was a domestic. She worked for a doctor and then became a cork in fancy boys' colleges. So it's got a personal, it resonates personally with me too. And, but really what it's all about is celebrating the deliciousness of cinema and the witty put down, the sassy comeback and the great delivery by these great women actresses.