メトロポリタン美術館のインスタグラム(metmuseum) - 7月22日 17時55分
Lorna Simpson (@lornasimpson), this week's #WomanCrushWednesday, has used photography to confront and challenge conventional views of gender, identity, culture, history, and memory.
In her 1998 work "Backdrops Circa 1940s," two screenprints printed on felt are presented side-by-side—the first depicting a woman posing for a studio portrait amid cutout moon and stars, and the second, a fragmented image of Lena Horne, the American entertainer and civil rights activist, singing on a film set resembling a night sky.
But the text that accompanies both images deliberately excludes information identifying the subjects, inviting the viewer to arrive at their own interpretation.
🎨 Lorna Simpson (American, born 1960). Backdrops Circa 1940s, 1998. © Lorna Simpson
📸 James Wang
#MetAnywhere @metdrawingsandprints
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2020/7/22