Activist, artist, curator, writer Judith K. Brodsky is Distinguished Professor Emerita, Department of Art and Design, Rutgers University. She is a works-on-paper artist with prints and drawings in many museum collections worldwide and the founder of the Rutgers Center for Innovative Print and Paper, now the Brodsky Center at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. The Brodsky Center, established in 1986, is known for its activist pioneer mission to further opportunities for women-identified, BIPOC, and non-binary artists. An exhibition documenting the years it was at Rutgers was on view at the Zimmerli Art Museum, Fall 2023. She was also co-founder of the Center for Women in the Arts and Humanities at Rutgers University in 2006. As a curator or co-curator, she has organized many exhibitions including The Fertile Crescent: Gender, Art, and Society (2012) and the Philadelphia city-wide print festival, Philagrafika (2010), three decades of exhibitions for the Rutgers Women Artists; Restoring the Art and Lives of a Circle of Five Forgotten Black Artists (2022); and (re)FOCUS: Philadelphia Focuses on Women in the Visual Arts, 1974-2024 (2024). She is past national president of ArtTable, College Art Association, Women's Caucus for Art, former board chair, New York Foundation for the Arts, current board member, Print Center New York, and a former dean and associate provost at Rutgers. Brodsky writes on women artists and printmaking. Her most recent book is Dismantling the Patriarchy Bit by Bit: Art, Feminism and Digital Technology (Bloomsbury 2022). A book on the history of the United States Feminist Art Movement focusing on the activist art historians and curators rather than the artists is due out in late 2026 (Bloomsbury Academic).