“I wish I could treat every day as Halloween, and get dressed up and go out into the world as some eccentric character.” — Cindy Sherman
For four decades, Cindy Sherman has probed the construction of identity, playing with the visual and cultural codes of art, celebrity, gender, and photography. She is among the most significant artists of the Pictures Generation—a group that also includes Richard Prince, Louise Lawler, Sherrie Levine, and Robert Longo—who came of age in the 1970s and responded to the mass media landscape surrounding them with both humor and criticism, appropriating images from advertising, film, television, and magazines for their art. Sherman was always interested in experimenting with different identities. As she has explained, “I wish I could treat every day as Halloween, and get dressed up and go out into the world as some eccentric character.” Shortly after moving to New York, she produced her Untitled Film Stills (1977–80), in which she put on guises and photographed herself in various settings with deliberately selected props to create scenes that resemble those from mid-20th-century B movies. Started when she was only 23, these images rely on female characters (and caricatures) such as the jaded seductress, the unhappy housewife, the jilted lover, and the vulnerable naif. Sherman used cinematic conventions to structure these photographs: they recall the film stills used to promote movies, from which the series takes its title. The 70 Film Stills immediately became flashpoints for conversations about feminism, postmodernism, and representation, and they remain her best-known works. Sherman has continued to transform herself, displaying the diversity of human types and stereotypes in her images. She often works in series, improvising on themes such as centerfolds (1981) and society portraits (2008). Untitled #216, from her history portraits (1981), exemplifies her use of theatrical effects to embody different roles and her lack of attempt to hide her efforts: often her wigs are slipping off, her prosthetics are peeling away, and her makeup is poorly blended. She highlights the artificiality of these fabrications, a metaphor for the artificiality of all identity construction. While she sometimes portrays glamorous characters, Sherman has always been more interested in the grotesque. In the 1980s and 1990s, series such as the disasters (1986–89) and the sex pictures (1992) confronted viewers with the strange and ugly aspects of humanity in explicit, visceral images. “I’m disgusted with how people get themselves to look beautiful; I’m much more fascinated with the other side,” she said in 1986. At the time, images of ailing bodies were painfully on view in the news during the AIDS crisis; these added poignancy to her investigation of the grotesque and of various types of violence that could be done to the body. In these series and throughout all of her work, Sherman subverts the visual shorthand we use to classify the world around us, drawing attention to the artificiality and ambiguity of these stereotypes and undermining their reliability for understanding a much more complicated reality.
Kristen Gaylord, Beaumont and Nancy Newhall Curatorial Fellow, Department of Photography, 2016
Works in Collection
95 works
1989
Chuck Close
2000
Ice Skater
Cindy Sherman
1979
Parkett no. 24
Alighiero Boetti
1990
Parkett no. 29
John Baldessari
1991
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1987
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1980
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1982
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1985
Untitled
Richard Prince
1980
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1983
Untitled
Cindy Sherman
1975
Untitled #131
Cindy Sherman
1983
Untitled #153
Cindy Sherman
1985
Untitled #187
Cindy Sherman
1989
Untitled #197
Cindy Sherman
1989
Untitled #228
Cindy Sherman
1990
Untitled #244
Cindy Sherman
1991
Untitled #345
Cindy Sherman
1999
Untitled #351
Cindy Sherman
2000
Untitled #466
Cindy Sherman
2008
Untitled #474
Cindy Sherman
2008
Untitled #70
Cindy Sherman
1980
Untitled #92
Cindy Sherman
1981
Untitled #96
Cindy Sherman
1981
Exhibitions
4 exhibitionsApr 13, 1983 – Jun 28, 1983
Big Pictures by Contemporary Photographers
33 artists · 2 curators
Aug 18, 1984 – Nov 06, 1984
Color Photographs: Recent Acquisitions
30 artists · 1 curator
Nov 07, 1985 – Jan 07, 1986
Self Portrait: The Photographer's Persona, 18401985
58 artists · 1 curator
Apr 07, 1986 – Jun 18, 1986
Contemporary Photography Reinstallation
29 artists · 1 curator