DES MOINES, IOWA (June 28, 2019) — Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate unveiled a new public art exhibit at the State Capitol on Friday, celebrating the 100th anniversary of women gaining the right to vote. The display features paintings of prominent women from the suffrage and civil rights movements.

Tuesday, July 2, marks the 100th anniversary of Iowa ratifying the 19thAmendment. Its passage ended the prohibition against females voting.

“We are going to spend the next year celebrating that landmark achievement for women,” Sec Pate said. “It was a long, hard battle before they were granted the right to vote. I want my three granddaughters and all Iowans to understand that history and see how far we’ve come.”

The first three portraits featured in the State Capitol exhibit include Iowans Carrie Chapman Catt and Edna Griffin, as well as civil-rights pioneer Ida Wells-Barnett. Catt was one of the national leaders for women’s suffrage, developing and implementing a state-by-state strategy that led to the passage of the 19th Amendment. Catt also founded the League of Women Voters.

Edna Griffin is known as “the Rosa Parks of Iowa”. She successfully fought against racial discrimination at a Des Moines drug store, five years before Rosa Parks refused to sit in the back of a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. Ida Wells was an early leader in the civil-rights movement and one of the founders of the NAACP.

The paintings were donated by Iowa artist Mary Kline-Misol, who is creating 19 portraits of female pioneers for suffrage and civil rights. Other paintings from her project, “Battle for the Ballot: Selections from the Suffrage Project 2020,” are on display at Artisan Gallery 218 in West Des Moines.

“This body of work is an attempt to honor the women who as suffragists organized a historic drive for civil rights and won citizenship, political freedom and the right to vote for all of us,” Kline-Misol said.

The public display is located next to the Secretary of State’s Capitol office, under the Iowa Suffrage Memorial that was created in 1936. The exhibit will feature a revolving set of portraits, historical items and tributes to women suffragists.

A photo of the exhibit is available for your use by clicking here.

Individual portraits are available for your use at the links below:

Edna Griffin

Carrie Chapman Catt

Ida Wells

A 30-second soundbite from Secretary Pate discussing the exhibit is available for your use by clicking here.

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