3 July 2026, 18:00 Uhr | Mahlzeit! Serving Gender | Museum Gunzenhauser

Opening: Mahlzeit! Serving Gender

We warmly invite you, your family and friends to the opening of the exhibition Mahlzeit! Serving Gender on Friday 3 July 2026 at 6 pm at the Gunzenhauser Museum.

With its three-part exhibition series Mahlzeit!, the Museum Gunzenhauser 2026 explores the theme of food in art. Following the exhibition Feinkunsthalle, which focused on the representation of the consumer and cultural history of food in art, the second part, Serving Gender, examines the complex connections between gender roles and food from a feminist perspective. Drawing on the collections of the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz and supplemented by contemporary art on loan, the exhibition presents works spanning different eras that reveal the diverse interconnections and ambivalences existing at the intersection of food and the social role of women. The scope ranges from Eve’s apple as the origin myth of female responsibility, through breast milk as a symbol of biological and socially expected care, to the complex norms, rituals and role models that link women and bodies perceived as female to the act of nurturing and eating.

In the global context, women have for centuries carried the main burden of the often invisible, unpaid care work associated with food: they cook, they provide food, they feed children, families and communities. Serving Gender focuses on women as society’s primary food providers and examines gender-specific ambivalences regarding food, which are linked to social power structures, cultural norms, role attributions, and the control and disciplining of the female body.

Central to the exhibition is the question of how food not only satisfies biological needs but also reproduces social structures: Who prepares the food, and who is depicted in images of these processes? What expectations of female care shape the dining table? Who is allowed to have an appetite? And why, in fact, are most top chefs male?

Download Event Directions Directions