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= Dyke Action Machine! = Dyke Action Machine! or DAM! is a public art and activist duo made up of designer Carrie Moyer and photographer Sue Schaffner. DAM! gained notoriety in the 1990s for using commercial photography styling with lesbian imagery in public art.

Artist Backgrounds
Before becoming a professional artist and activist, Carrie Moyer worked as a graphic designer for major consumer advertising and design firms for five years. This work offered her connections within the advertising industry that she would later utilize during her involvement with Queer Nation and Dyke Action Machine!.

Before Dyke Action Machine!, Sue Schnaffner also worked in the advertising industry as a free-lance photographer.

Involvement with Queer Nation
Queer Nation is a lesbian and gay direct-action group that was founded in 1990 in New York City.

Carrie Moyer joined Queer Nation in 1990, just a few months after its founding. She had attended several ACT UP demos in the years prior but Queer Nation was the first activist group that she was ever a formal member of. Moyer says she felt compelled to join the group because of increasing feelings of alienation from “straight mainstream culture."

Sue Schaffner joined Queer Nation in 1991. She was inspired to do so after viewing Queer Nation’s “Absolutely Queer” poster campaign which “outed” celebrities using Absolut Vodka ads.

Dyke Action Machine!
After meeting at an event for Queer Nation, Sue Schaffner and Carrie Moyer formed Dyke Action Machine! (DAM!) in 1991 in New York City. '''At first DAM! was not its own entity, but instead, a lesbian working group of Queer Nation. However, once Queer Nation disbanded in 1993, Schaffner and Moyer kept the name and continued to work under it.''' DAM!'s name was chosen to signal "that lesbians had their own particular set of oppressions and social conditions - separate from gay men - that needed attending to." DAM! specifically targeted lesbophobia, the marginalization of lesbians not only in favor of heterosexuality but also within LGBT circles, where Schaffner and Moyer saw the male homosexual as privileged.

The duo created radical feminist public art, putting images of lesbians into commercialized styles and settings. Together with groups like Guerilla Girls and Toxic Titties, DAM! resisted sexism and consumerism. DAM! has been described as intentionally pluralistic, embracing many identities and issues.

With Schaffner's experience as a commercial photographer and Moyer's work as a designer and painter, the duo captured and created images reminiscent of commercial advertising but delivered messages that raised the profile of lesbians. This material was then placed where ads were typically seen, such as bus stops, telephone booths, and construction site barricades. DAM!'s method of presenting lesbian activist art in typically commercial landscapes creates an effect described by some as "slick subvertising" and "agit-prop".

Schaffner and Moyer remained anonymous for seven years, signing their work only with Dyke Action Machine!. '''However, in 1998, DAM! published a postcard that pictured Schaffner and Moyer standing with their arms folded defiantly and read “Meet the Muffiosi: We are Dyke Action Machine!. With this postcard, Schaffner and Moyer broke their anonymity and publicly claimed the actions of DAM!.'''

Among the influences for their work are Gran Fury, Barbara Kruger, and Fran Winant. The duo is mainly active in the New York City area, although their work has been shown internationally and they make some available to be downloaded and distributed by anyone.

The work of Dyke Action Machine! is held at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. It has been included in anthologies and encyclopedias of queer and lesbian art, where their work has been discussed alongside LGBT artist activists Chloe Atkins, Kay Shumack, Marion Moore, Jill Posener, the Australian Word of Mouth Collective. In 2000, Schaffner and Moyer won a Creative Capital award for visual arts to create Gynadome: A Separate Paradise.

The GAP Campaign
DAM!’s first poster project, released in June of 1991, purpose was to expose the lack of lesbian representation in American popular culture. These politicized posters were intended to be read as advertisements fitting seamlessly into a commercialized streetscape. The project consisted of 500 posters placed all over the city of New York - on mass transit busses and payphone kiosks - highlighting the fact that for one to “exist” or be visible in mainstream media, one must belong to a recognizable consumer group. The campaign replaced the photos of mostly-unknown celebrities featured in the GAP ads with pictures of obviously queer lesbians. The GAP Campaign critiques lesbian invisibility as well as tackling the psychology of advertising.

Exhibitions

 * 1993: SILENCE=DEATH Munchner Stadtmuseum, Munich and Hygiene-Musem, Dresden, Germany
 * 1993: Kunst und AIDS International AIDS Conference, Berlin, Germany
 * 1994: Amendments Hallwalls, Buffalo, New York
 * 1994: Becoming Visible: The Legacy of Stonewall New York Public Library, New York, New York
 * 1995: In a Different Light University Art Museum, Berkeley, California
 * 1995: You Are Missing Plenty if You Don't Buy Here: Images of Consumerism in American Photography Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York
 * 1995: Copy-Art Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, Germany
 * 1996: Mixing Messages: Graphic Design in Contemporary Culture Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, catalog, Manhattan, New York
 * 1996: Gender, Fucked Center on Contemporary Art, Seattle, Washington
 * 1996: Portraiture White Columns, New York, New York
 * 1996: Counterculture: Alternative Information from the Underground Press to the Internet Exit Art/The First World, New York, New York
 * 1997: Vraiment: Féminisme et Art Le Magasin-Centre National D'Art Contemporain de Grenoble, catalog, France
 * 1997: Revolution Girl-Style Messepalast/Museumquartier, catalog, Vienna, Austria
 * 1997: Patriotism The Lab, San Francisco, California
 * 1999: Gender Trouble (Unbehagen der Geschlechter) Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, Germany
 * 2000: The Biggest Games in Town Künstlerwerkstatt Lothringer Strasse, Munich, Germany
 * 2000: The Color of Friendship Shedhalle, Zürich, Switzerland
 * 2002: Straight to Hell: 10 Years of Dyke Action Machine! Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Berkeley, California; Diverseworks, Houston, Texas
 * 2002: Queer Commodity Mount Saint Vincent University Art Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia
 * 2003: Ameri©an Dre@m: A Survey Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York, New York
 * 2003: Illegal Art: Freedom of Expression in the Corporate Age CBGB's 313 Gallery, New York, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) Artist Gallery, San Francisco, California
 * 2004: Republican Like Me Parlour Projects, Brooklyn, New York
 * 2005: Twofold: Collaborations on Campus Richard L. Nelson Gallery and Fine Arts Collection, University of California, Davis, California
 * 2006: When Artists Say We Artists Space, New York, New York
 * 2008: Reclaiming the "F" Word: Posters on International Feminisms California State University, Northridge, California
 * 2008: Break the rules! Mannheimer Kunstverein, Mannheim, Germany

Practice Exercises
The feminist art group I have chosen for the Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon project is Dyke Action Machine!.

Dyke Action Machine!

Dyke Action Machine!

Dyke Action Machine! is a public art project that artist Carrie Moyer and photographer Sue Schaffner created in 1991.

Dyke Action Machine!
I choose Dyke Action Machine! for this project because their current wikipedia page is quite short and they have less than 20 citations on it.

I have never edited on wikipedia before so all of this is a learning experience for me. In making these edits, I have found the ART + FEMINISM tutorial pdf linked on our class canvas page to be a helpful resource.

Some sources related to Dyke Action Machine! that I have found at the UW libraries and requested copies of are:

Straight to hell: 10 years of Dyke Action Machine! (Book)

''Dyke Action Machine! : We'll Bust Your Balls'' (Book)

Queer (Book)

I hope to find more academic articles on Dyke Action Machine! in the coming weeks as I have only really looked at physical sources up until this point.