GIRL WITH MANY SELVES.
by Chase, Alisia G.
Afterimage • May-June, 2007 • AKA Nikki S. Lee by Nikki S. Lee
AKA NIKKI S. LEE
BY NIKKI S. LEE
60 MINUTES, 2006
Like another case of art imitating life imitating popular
stereotypes, a trope that defines much of Nikki S. Lee's work thus
far, this fashionably mutating artist was among the crowd, but
incognito, for the regional premiere of her first film, AKA Nikki S.
Lee. Her black shag and sober clothing marked her as an understudied but
hip grad student from the nearby university, so when she rose from the
row behind us, much of the audience laughed. Once more, Lee confirmed
that context and costume determine not only how we read an image, but
also how we read real life.
In her introduction, Lee appropriately acknowledged that
"what's a reality and what's not a reality" is no
longer a distinction worth discerning. As her cinematic foray into the
elusive boundaries between fashion's fictions and fact further
proposes, we are always metamorphosing, dressing, and performing with
the gaze or expectations of another in mind, and in turn, make
presumptions on the same. Her sardonic detachment from herself as a
subject, perhaps unexpected given her body's central role in her
work, was manifest when the slide projector would not advance. After
about four minutes, Lee looked up at the maroon-toned work by Mark
Rothko on the screen and deadpanned, "So, this is Nikki ... as a
painting."
The hour-long film, shot on digital video in 2004 and 2005, is
simultaneously "a fake documentary of a real artist" and
"a real documentary of a fake artist" that follows the
"days in the many lives" of Lee, whose first well-known
photographic images, the "Projects" series (1997-2001),
continued the artistic experiments with the transformed-self begun by
female artists in the 1970s. By adopting the head-to-toe style of
subcultures like "Skaters," "Yuppies," or
"Homegirls," Lee fluidly morphed into a variety of visual
stereotypes--a dreadlocked, West Coast skater girl or a sallow-skinned,
magenta-haired East Village punk as only two of her myriad mutations.
Viewed as a whole, "Projects" proffered a visual paradigm of a
post-identity politics, post-MTV generation weaned as much on
fashion's global marketplace as on its media. Now, Lee suggested,
identities are simply fleeting allegiances, shopped and slipped into as
much as they are formed by one's experiences.
Indeed, in AKA Nikki S. Lee, Lee seems determined to prove that
there is no overt emotional, social, or political investment in such
guises, and correct the misconception that identity is fixed or stable.
By creating "a Nikki Lee based on what people think Nikki Lee would
be like," she insinuates that every identity, whether individual or
group, eastern or western, Korean or American, is always contextual. Her
multiple personas imply that we are all "girl(s) with many
selves," depending on who and what surrounds us. Whether she
portrays herself as a reclusive bibliophile in spectacles, a formally
coiffed bride from the boroughs, or a jet-setting artiste with
paparazzi-avoiding shades, Lee seamlessly melds with the mise-en-scene,
which in turn helps the viewer flesh out the intentionally banal
dialogue.
Epitomizing Roland Barthes's prescient definition of a
fashionable woman, Lee never appears destabilized by this consistent
engagement with la mode's masquerades. Rather, they become her
second skins. As she states in one scene, "I cannot be totally
natural and be myself." The viewer watches Lee preen as a
couture-clad "Asian doll" in Paris, mix with sycophantic
collectors in Manhattan, and forlornly stroll the streets of Frankfurt,
but never grasps hold of the "real" Nikki. In essence, so
little of revelatory importance happens that one is forced to fill in
the ellipses with the visual details that Lee artfully styles. It is
arranging the artifice of fashion's trappings, quite precisely,
that is her art, and no less powerful for being so. As Barthes affirms
in The Fashion System (1967): "[La Mode] ne supprime pas le sens;
elle le montre du doit" (Fashion does not suppress meaning; it
points to it with its finger).
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Although Lee frequently references Barthes, another iconoclastic
Frenchman may provide a better filmic analogy. Like the most disquieting
meditations in recent work by Jean-Luc Godard, Lee's most profound
insights regarding the contemporary condition are evoked by ostensibly
insignificant props. In one collector's home, hundreds of
two-dimensional artworks lay stacked against one another, their economic
and artistic value so clearly inconsequential that her young son is
allowed to put Post-it notes on them to demarcate his preferences. In
another, it is bridal gowns--billowing and opulent--that reveal the
staggering, new-millennium excess of both money and goods in the Long
Island suburbs. The last appears during a lengthy tracking shot that
follows Lee, the supposed star of this film, at a crowded photography
fair in New York City. Passing by hundreds of booths representing other
photographers, her petite figure becomes nearly invisible. As the viewer
realizes that no one is paying any attention to Lee, the ingenious
inclusion of a Chanel Egoiste perfume advertisement in the frame is
another reminder that she does not take her art world celebrity or her
"self" too seriously. Like the Nikki in her early photographs,
in real life she's just another face in the crowd.
ALISIA G. CHASE, PhD, is an assistant professor in the art
department at the State University of New York at Brockport.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Visual Studies
Workshop Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.