This article examines The Famous Women Project, a 2019 co‑production initiative at Tate Exchange, through its engagement with three feminist precedents: the Famous Women Dinner Service, Cicely Hamilton’s A Pageant of Great Women, and regional post‑suffrage pageants. It argues that these historically rooted, participatory practices prefigure contemporary co‑production frameworks by modelling democratic intent, equitable collaboration, and valuing diverse forms of knowledge. Analysing the project’s development, partnerships and public‑facing activities, the article demonstrates how co‑production can function simultaneously as method and critique, offering an ethically engaged approach to feminist exhibition‑making and expanding representational possibilities within British arts institutions.
H Leaper (Mon,) studied this question.
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