A quick look at
The Great Women Portrait Project
The project, which launched on International Women's Day 2023 and enters its 3rd year in 2025, started with a simple realization by an artist and mother who had started painting historic female pioneers for her young daughter.
"I discovered women are hungry for their history," says Jo Napier, the Halifax, Nova Scotia-based artist behind a project which lets leaders use art to reveal the 'female face' of innovation.
"Back then, I was reading these stories to my daughter at night - Caillou, Curious George, Babar... I recognized it as a powerful, teachable time and thought I should tell her about 'great women' of Nova Scotia. But - after being a journalist for a dozen years in Nova Scotia newsrooms - not a single person came to mind. I had nothing; no great stories to tell her."
But she had time, at home, for the first time in years. She started researching Nova Scotia's pioneering women, painting them and producing "Great Women portrait shows" at The Nova Scotia Archives gallery in Halifax.
Men liked the shows. But women? "They loved seeing the portraits, reading the women's stories."
And they made it clear that they wanted more:
"They approached me in person; they left long notes in the comment books at my Archive shows. I could feel their hunger. I had it too. All these great women whose faces I'd never seen, whose accomplishments I'd never known." (The Nova Scotia government created a beautiful book about this first portrait collection.)
As her daughter grew older, Jo started researching the women who'd pioneered paths in traditionally male-dominated domains like science, tech, engineering, math (STEM) and medicine
As her very first, large-scale, collection of contemporary portraits - 'The Nova Scotia Nine' - was acquired by The Royal Bank for their national art collection, it now hung in a beautiful boardroom on the Halifax waterfront. Jo asked Stewart Robinson, Atlantic Canada head of RBC Dominion Securities, if she could hold a few meetings in the boardroom.
"I wanted to see if my idea resonated; had traction.". The idea was this: invite business, STEM and community leaders to hang great women's portrait images and stories in public and professional spaces. "The behavioral science shows that, by doing so, they could shape a more inclusive professional landscape. Engage, educate and inspire by sharing women's hidden history with others."
Napier was told staff at RBC Dominion Securities preferred to book the "The Nova Scotia Nine" boardroom for meetings because the artwork created an extra dimension in that environment: "the pioneering women's portraits and stories were conversation starters and shaped the space in a powerful, inclusive-feeling way."
If she was going to ask an assortment of busy professional women to give her an hour of their time, she wanted to give them something meaningful at the end of the meeting: a keepsake that resonated.
She got a small grant and used it to create for each meeting participant individual little place settings... packages, each wrapped in a lovely long peony pink ribbon" contained: high-quality handouts capturing Napier's "Great Women portraits"; a beautiful booklet that captured, in simple and clear language, what the project was about; a copy of Invisible Women, which captures data on how the world is designed for me - and the impact that bias has on women. "I also wanted to include something whimsical - so it wasn't all...'Here's the project concept. Here's the artwork. Here's the hard data that underscores why it's vital we try and help shape a more inclusive world."
She remembered a favorite pin she used to wear that said: "Uppity Women Unite"; Napier went online to order some from a small company in California. On its website, Napier saw she could order 50 pins - and, beside the pins, noticed a picture of a woman - "looking very Sixties mod, in a mini-skirt, wearing the 'Uppity Women Unite' pin. I thought: is she the women who designed this great pin, back in the day?"
In fact, the blond woman wearing the pin, was Poppy Northcutt - according to the pin maker, Poppy was "the first female engineer in NASA’s Mission Control... who went on to fight for equal rights for women."
Napier's journalistic instincts kicked in: "I was in my kitchen, in my pajamas, researching Poppy for more than an hour - such a fascinating person - and decided to send her a message via LinkedIn. My thinking was: I love this project idea - the idea of creating a constellation of women leaders who'd hang portraits of great women.
"But I really wanted a feminist STEM icon as my 'North Star' for the project. When I saw Poppy - wearing my pin - it felt like a sign: here's your North Star."
When they spoke, Poppy asked how she could help and Napier said she'd like to bring a 30-second video clip to the meetings that inspired women to act.
"Poppy Northcutt created this 2-minute video that rocked the room. It moved many of the women at those meetings to action. It moved a few - so they told me later - to tears."
Afterward, Napier asked a dozen women to come on board the project and, within an hour or so of her ask, 10 signed on.
Two of the ten were Dr. Katharina Kieser, QEII gynecologic oncologist, and community health leader Dr. Margaret Casey. They became part of a 4-member group that, collectively, commissioned one of the first Great Woman portraits.
(Related story and video clip of installation)
Next, Napier, received a call from Vienna. The woman at the end of the line was Rumina Velshi, then head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, who "said she'd heard about the project, and wanted the Canadian nuclear sector to be part of it."
In a collaborative effort, Velshi and 4 other female industry leaders (listed below ***) commissioned an oil painting of Canada’s first female nuclear physicist, Harriet Brooks.
The intent of commissioning the portrait - and displaying Harriet Brooks portrait prints in the boardrooms or main reception areas of 30 largest nuclear corporations - was, said Velshi, "to recognize and celebrate the remarkable contributions of women in the nuclear industry, and more broadly in STEM and shine a spotlight on the achievements of women in nuclear, including scientists and engineers. "
Next on board was Sanofi Pharmaceuticals. Alerted to the project by a local medical leader, Sanofi's interest was centred on honouring polio pioneer Leone Farrell with a portrait for their new conference centre and historic gallery.
By year 2, Lockheed Martin Canada was among the companies and leaders who had joined the project, commissioning an original Great Woman portrait of Mary Ann Shadd for their Ottawa headquarters, and portrait prints of a various historic female pioneers for their offices across Canada.
And Napier started to carry the project across the Canada-U.S. border by honoring American STEM icons like Glady West an sharing her portrait with U.S. leaders and STEM organizations .
What will the project look like in Year 3?
The project's first sponsor, Parkwood Home Care CEO Lorna MacMillan, commissioned a portrait of nursing pioneer and statistician Florence Nightengale, and more Canadian-based business and community leaders will be invited to join the project in 2025 - with a new focus on securing sponsorship among female CEOs in the U.S., primarily in STEM-related fields. As well, Napier's Great Women print collections (eg Great Women of STEM, Great Women of Canada, and Great Women of Medicine, collections reflecting portraits already commissioned and now hanging in public spaces, university libraries, boardrooms and CEO's offices across Canada), will continue to expand with new original portrait commissions.
"We don't know the history of great women because men were the record keepers. But that omission is an opportunity as well.
"Art has always been a powerful too in that regard. We're use portrait art to help close a gap in our consciousness because everyone who participates in this project share a similar belief: that we can't afford a gender gap, especially in STEM fields, anymore. We need all our talent at the table solving the world's problems.
"So we're working to educate and inspire. To reveal our hidden STEM history. Because we want girls and young women - and boys and young men - when they think of scientists or inventors or STEM innovators - to see a female face, too."
For more information, feel free to contact project participants:
Jo Napier
(902)209.8300
Rumina Velshi
Frances 'Poppy' Northcutt
Dr. Katharina Kieser
*** The list of 5 female CEOs in Canadian nuclear energy industry who participated in project:
Laurie Swami, President and CEO, Nuclear Waste Management Organization;
Lisa McBride, then President, Women in Nuclear Canada;
Lori Clark, CEO New Brunswick Power;
Rachna Claver, CEO, CANDU Owners Group; and
Rumina Velshi, then head of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission