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Join Us: Feminist History Tree Ring Seneca Falls, NY

The Birthplace of Women's Rights

Friday, May 8 and Saturday, May 9, 2026 |

Weekend Celebration

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Featuring Tiffany Shlain's moveable monument Dendrofemonology: A Feminist History Tree Ring

In Partnership with:​

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Free and open to the public

Let us know you are coming:

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Be sure to also Register with Right to Run for all the weekend's celebrations!

This is a beautiful continuation of the journey of the moveable monument, Dendrofemonology: A Feminist History Tree Ring from our first installation on the National Mall in Washington, DC, to Madison Square Park in NYC, to 21c Museum in St. Louis, and most recently in San Francisco, CA with Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

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We are thrilled to join forces with Right to Run in Seneca Falls, NY to bring Tiffany Shlain's moveable monument Dendrofemonology: A Feminist History Tree Ring to the birthplace of women's rights. The Mother's Day weekend celebration, May 8 & 9 includes a keynote by Tiffany, a 5k walk/run to honor the journey women traveled for the right to vote, wellness workshops, book signings and more. Register below. The moveable monument journey is supported by Dr. Piraye Yurttas Beim & Women Connect4Good.

Sponsored by:

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Dr. Piraye Yurttas Beim

This all builds off the momentum of the previous installations and activations of Dendrofemonology: A Feminist History Tree Ring from DC, NYC, to St. Louis to San Francisco, with the 50+ organizations and speakers including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Dolores Huerta, Padma Lakshmi, founder of the #MeToo Movement Tarana Burke, and the original Wonder Woman, Lynda Carter and VP Harris who is also featured on the Feminist History Tree Ring monument and more...

Below is a 8 min film We Are Here about the creative process and journey of the moveable monument. This film has played at film festivals around the world including Berlin, Paris, Tokyo and Mumbai. We announce where the moveable monument is headed next at the end of the film! 

ABOUT

About Let it Ripple

Let it Ripple is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, founded in 2013 to create films, art, events and discussion materials that inspire important conversations about society.  

 

About Women Connect4Good

At Women Connect4Good, our mission is simple – women (and men) supporting women, without exclusion.

For more information or interviews contact:

art@tiffanyshlain.com

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DENDROFEMONOLOGY: A FEMINIST HISTORY TREE RING

Reclaimed deodar cedar wood sculpture 
60" x 65" x 3" E.V. 4 /4 +  2AP 

Framed Large-Scale Photograph

68' x 63' Edition 4/4 + 2 AP

 text timeline hand burned via pyrography into the wood

  • 50,000 BCE: Goddesses are worshiped. 

  • 10,000-3000: BCE Women are healers, shamans, and warriors. A number of societies acknowledge multiple genders.

  • 3100 BCE: Literacy develops, and seeds of patriarchy spread.

  • 2400 BCE: Mesopotamian law declares: “If a woman speaks to a man out of turn, her teeth will be smashed in by a burnt brick.” 

  • 200 BCE: Goddess worship is forbidden in Judaism, and later, in Islam and Christianity.

  • 690:  Wu Zetian becomes the first—and only—female ruler of China.  

  • 1100: Matrilineal and matriarchal Hopi tribe establishes the community of Oraibi in present-day Arizona.

  • 1450 to 1918: 50,000 women tortured and executed as witches across Europe and America.

  • 1576-1610: Queen Amina rules over Zazzau (present-day Nigeria).

  • 1690s: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz becomes the first published feminist in the Americas.

  • 1776-1860s: Abortion up to four months of pregnancy is legal in the United States.

  • 1880s: Inspired by indigenous and abolitionist leaders and British suffragists, first-wave feminism gains momentum in the United States.

  • 1920: 19th Amendment grants US women the right to vote, although most women of color are disenfranchised until the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

  • 1920: The Soviet Union legalizes abortion.

  • 1960: FDA approves birth control pill in the United States

  • 1960: Sirimavo Bandaranaike of Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka) becomes the first woman to be elected to lead a democratic country.

  • 1962: Dolores Huerta co-founds US National Farm Workers' Association.

  • 1960s: Second-wave feminism begins with leaders including Dorothy Pitman Hughes, Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem, Flo Kennedy, and Shirley Chisholm.

  • 1963: First woman in space Valentina Tereshkova flies a solo mission and orbits Earth 48 times.

  • 1972: Title IX prohibits gender-based discrimination in US federally-funded educational programs and activities.

  • 1972: The US Senate approves addition of the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution. (The states have not yet ratified it.)

  • 1973: Roe vs. Wade legalizes abortion in all US states and territories.

  • 1974-1980: The Combahee River Women’s Collective calls out the interconnectedness of sexism, racism, and homophobia, and demands change in mainstream feminism and civil rights movement.

  • 1975: Icelandic Women’s Strike held to protest inequality in the workplace and the home. 90% of women participate, and 15 years later Iceland elects a woman president.

  • 1989: Kimberlé Crenshaw defines the concept of intersectionality and ushers in third-wave feminism.

  • 1993: Women allowed to wear pants on the floor of the US Senate.

  • 2006: Tarana Burke begins #MeToo movement.

  • 2016: Hillary Rodham Clinton receives the majority of votes in the US presidential election.

  • 2017: An estimated 5 million people attend Women’s Marches globally. #MeToo goes viral.

  • 2017: Oregon becomes first state to include non-binary gender category on IDs.

  • 2020-2022: US elects first female Vice President Kamala Harris and first trans State Senator, Sarah McBride; Ketanji Brown Jackson becomes first Black woman confirmed to Supreme Court.

  • 2022: 

    • Roe v. Wade is overturned, eviscerating federal protection of reproductive rights in the U.S.

    • Globally, 65 countries have legalized abortions, four in the last year.

    • Globally, 86 women have been elected president or prime minister to date

  • Today:

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ABOUT THE ARTIST
TIFFANY SHLAIN

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Honored by Newsweek as one of the "Women Shaping the 21st Century," Tiffany Shlain is a multidisciplinary artist, Emmy-nominated filmmaker, national bestselling author, and the founder of the Webby Awards. Working across mediums, Shlain's work explores ideas in feminism, philosophy, technology, neuroscience, and nature. Her work has been shown at the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museums in New York, the Sundance Film Festival and US embassies globally.

 

Her sculpture Dendrofemonology A Feminist History Tree Ring, has been installed around the country to bring together groups working to protect and expand women's rights. Her solo exhibition You Are Here at Nancy Hoffman Gallery in New York was selected by both Artnet and Artforum on their "Must-See" gallery shows list. Her critically acclaimed joint exhibition with Ken Goldberg for the Getty's PST ART: Art & Science Collide art initiative Ancient Wisdom for A Future Ecology: Trees, Time & Technology, that debuted in Los Angeles, and now is at di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art's museum location in San Francisco, until April 11th, 2026.

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