A. Earhart chosen for the Singulart Selection for International Women's Day

In celebration of International Women’s Day, Singulart has chosen a collection of 25 artworks from over 600 submissions.

I am very proud and honored that my work A.Earhart has been selected as one of these 25 artworks by an international jury of experts:

Singulart’s International Women’s Day Selection

Louise Bourgeois said, “An artist can show things that others are too afraid to express.”

These women have done exactly that, crafting works that speak to the power of perseverance, identity, and truth.

You may find my Singulart Artist Profile here >>>

A. Earhart at Singulart >>>

This is what I wrote in my presentation of the artwork for the evaluation of the jury:

Amelia Earhart confidently and self-assuredly took the controls of her airplane in a world that sought to keep women grounded in every sense.

Her flights were more than records – they were messages. Women should pursue paths that had previously been denied to them: technology, aviation, science – all of these should not belong to men alone.

In a similar way, Louise Bourgeois advocated for the visibility of women in the art world. She fought for their work to be taken seriously, for them to occupy spaces that had long been closed off to them.

Some of her SEAmaps are dedicated to remarkable personalities: brave and curious people who have changed the world. This one tells the story of the final flight of aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart, a trailblazer and role model for many women of future generations.

In her hand, Amelia holds a red lifeline: it connects the points of her last journey, but more than that: it connects the past and the future, hope and responsibility. This line symbolizes the mark she left behind – not just as a pilot, but as a pioneer.

The red line that Amelia holds in her hand does not break. It continues in every woman who dares to follow her own path. In every woman who sees the sky not as a limit, but as a possibility.

Karin Schäfer