Ida Applebroog’s art didn’t just hang on SoHo’s gallery walls—it unsettled them. For over sixty years, the Bronx-born artist dissected the everyday theater of power and gender, using everything from paintings on Rhoplex-coated vellum to sculptures and films. Her signature scenes, often flat and ambiguous, transformed ordinary domestic moments into uneasy puzzles, exposing the silent negotiations and gaps that shape family life. Applebroog called herself an “image scavenger,” reworking fragments from TV and magazines into sharp, feminist critiques. Her figures—sometimes headless, sometimes distorted—hinted at the emotional turbulence beneath the surface. Even late in life, she adapted her vision to new times, as seen in her "Angry Birds of America" series, where dead birds became symbols of political unrest. Applebroog’s legacy is a reminder: the familiar can be the most subversive stage of all, and humor can be a scalpel for truth. #IdaApplebroog #FeministArt #ContemporaryArt #Culture