In a 1971 essay entitled Why Have There Been No Great Female Artists?, feminist art critic Linda Nochlin attributes the absence of female Michelangelo's and lady Picasso's not to a lack of greatness, but rather to a historical bias against women which has not only forbidden them from artistic practices in the past, but also from being written about in the pages of history. Traditionally greatness has been male-defined, but as Dallas-born dreamboat Rosson Crow demonstrates, things are starting to change. From her large-scale paint-drenched canvases to her crazy show girl outfits, Rosson's world is anything but black and white. Since graduating from New York's School of Visual Arts in 2004, her work has been celebrated with a residency at the Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris and in exhibtions across the world. As Rosson takes us on a journey through galaxies of kaleidoscopic colour, in her latest group show Domestic Unrest, we caught up with her to talk gender, nostalgia and American history. Welcome to the Dallas Girl's Club; bring your paintbrush!