Questioning reality.
by Conner, Jill
Afterimage • July-August, 2007 • Lorna Simpson's exhibit
LORNA SIMPSON
WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
NEW YORK CITY
MARCH 1-MAY 6, 2007
Nearly twenty years after the civil rights movement pierced
Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, African American photographer Lorna
Simpson began revisiting the social structures that have historically
limited the upward mobility of the black community. The small
retrospective of her work recently on view at the Whitney Museum of
American Art in New York City features an array of photographs and
videos that span from 1983 to 2002 and collectively gauge whether racial
stereotypes still exist and function as significant oppressive barriers.
Through extensive juxtaposition of word and image, Simpson presents
anonymous, innocent subjects who accidentally evoke a series of social
sentiments by way of the artist's applied literal associations.
This simple construct, used frequently in newspaper journalism, exposes
the ominous method of identification that subsequently defines
individuals and groups for the national population, leaving drastic
socioeconomic and political effects in its wake.
The show opened with a large black-and-white gelatin silver print
titled Water Bearer (1986) depicting the back of a black woman in a
sleeveless white dress who is seen emptying a plastic jug with one hand
and a silver pitcher with another. The overt demand for female labor
that existed between a woman's own poor family and the wealthy one
that she served daily exposes the divided aspects of black women's
lives. The wall nearby features "Gestures/Reenactments"
(1985), which consists of six gelatin silver prints along with seven
engraved plastic plaques. Using various perspectives of an African
American man's stance as her subject, Simpson supplies various
texts and suggests a variety of codes that could be read into each one.
Using short statements that lack clear directive, the male figure in
each photograph is the main referent for every literal idea.
As Okwui Enwezor states in the exhibition catalog, Simpson's
early photographs, taken during the late 1970s and not included in this
show, offer an unstaged global view into daily life: "In Italy,
Spain, France, Morocco, Mauritania, Algeria, Jamaica, New York, and the
American South, Simpson pursued her practice by training herself to see
images in everyday events and social rituals." (1) The
documentary-style investigations led Simpson to realize the tension that
exists between camera and subject, emphasizing the vulnerability of the
sitter who could only look away from the camera as a document was made
with the fast click of the shutter. However, by the early 1980s Simpson
withdrew these images from circulation since, as Enwezor suggests, she
confronted a crisis within photographic representation in addition to,
"race, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, authorship, and
authority." (2) Not long after that, Simpson shifted her focus to
the African American woman.
"You're Fine, You're Hired" (1988) features the
reclining figure of a black woman using four large Polaroid prints
framed in light-colored wood. Measuring 9 feet long, this installation
masks the woman's identity, portraying her from the back. Using
color film as metaphor, the artist suggests the plight of the
professional black woman during the late twentieth century. On the far
right two plaques next to each other read, "Secretarial" and
"Position," while the left side reveals a list of anatomical
terms. By dissecting the female body, Simpson moves beyond the initial
appearance that dominates the piece. Above and below the Polaroids, the
artist added, "You're Fine, You're Hired." Quite
similarly, "Stereo Styles" (1988) features ten individually
framed Polaroid prints capturing various hairstyles worn by African
American women. Words such as daring, sensible, and sweet reside
arbitrarily between both rows of images, putting the viewer in the
discriminatory position.
During the late 1980s, the field of feminism also experienced
another revision that resulted in the creation of the Third Wave.
Embracing the writings of bell hooks, members of this movement opened
the doors to women of all races and cultural backgrounds. The key was to
constantly assess the experiences of women's lives. "Untitled
(2 Necklines)" (1989) captures two black-and-white prints of a
woman's neck while in between both images are plaques that
ominously read "Ring, Surround, Lasso, Noose, Eye, Areola, Halo,
Cuffs, Collar, Loop, Feel the ground sliding from under you."
Domestic abuse received extensive press during the late twentieth
century as activists and lobby groups--such as the National Organization
for Women--advocated for Congressional approval of the Violence Against
Women Act, which was first recognized in 1998 and revised in 2005.
Anchored by five video installations that explore the disparity
between genders as well as the exploitation of women, Simpson's
retrospective clearly targets all aspects of racial and gender
stereotypes, forcing the viewer to confront his or her own issues
relating to diversification. As Hilton Als wrote, "Born in 1960,
Simpson belongs to that generation of artists who were inspired as much
by film ... as by the other plastic arts. To direct is to love the
object under review, as well as a desire to dissect
'her.'" (3) Although one would rather believe that this
show represents an encapsulated, historic moment, it in fact captures an
ongoing portrait of American society.
JILL CONNER is an art critic based in New York City and a
contributing editor for Contemporary magazine.
NOTES 1. Okwui Enwezor, "Representation and
Differentiation--Lorna Simpson's Iconography of the Racial
Sublime," in Okwui Enwezor, et al., Lorna Simpson (New York: Harry
N. Abrams and American Federation of Arts, 2006, exhibition catalog),
103. 2. Ibid., 111. 3. Ibid., 145.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.