1977 - 1982
27 October 2022 - 8 January 2023
Downtown Los Angeles
One Revolutionary Artist. Over 100 Groundbreaking Works.
Explore a curated selection of Cindy Sherman’s most powerful and enigmatic bodies of work currently on view in our Downtown Los Angeles gallery.
Preferring to work alone, Sherman was not only the photographer, but also the makeup artist, hairdresser, and director, casting herself as the star of staged, fictional tableaux. Sherman was inspired by depictions of women in television, film, and advertising and her characters explore a range of female stereotypes to confront the nature of identity and representation in the media in a way that remains surprising and relevant today. Created over forty years ago, these bodies of work are touchstones of contemporary art that continue to inspire and influence the course of art and image-making.
Listen to creatives from the worlds of art, literature and fashion—Eva Respini, Avery Singer, Lauren Oyler, and Gabriella Karefa-Johnson—reflect on Sherman’s influence.
Sherman began making the Untitled Film Stills in the fall of 1977 just after moving to New York City at twenty-three years old. This iconic series of eight-by-ten-inch black-and-white photographs was originally conceived as a group of imaginary film stills from a single actress’s career. What began as an experiment in how to imply narrative without involving other people would evolve into 70 works over the next three years. Inspired by 1950s and 1960s Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house films, Sherman’s plethora of invented characters and scenarios imitated the style of production shots used by movie studios to publicize their films.
In 1980, Sherman moved away from the Untitled Film Stills and began working in color. Instead of making use of existing outdoor light and locations, Sherman brought her work back into the controlled environment of the studio, posing in front of locations projected onto a large screen. The rear screen technique, honed by Hollywood’s silver screen, gave the illusion of travel or movement in one’s surroundings, was exemplified in the 1950s films of Alfred Hitchcock. No longer bound by physical surroundings, the series became known as the Rear Screen Projections and continued Sherman’s dialogue with cinema.
Around the same time that Sherman was making the Rear Screen Projections, she was commissioned to create new images for Artforum magazine. The twelve color horizontal photographs that comprise the series ushered in a new era in Sherman's career. Continuing her exploration of the tension between artifice and identity in consumer culture, she responded with a series clearly referencing erotic images commonly found in the middle of men’s magazines at the time. Sherman reverses the dynamic of male photographer and female pin-up by assuming both roles, consequently subverting the genre by replacing the traditional nude woman with fully clothed female subjects reclining in emotionally suggestive yet ambivalently distanced poses. The photographs were ultimately never published by the magazine for fear of public backlash and instead became a critically acclaimed series known as the Centerfolds.
‘Art Innovator: Cindy Sherman,’ WSJ – The Wall Street Journal Magazine (November 2019)
The final chapter of the show includes the full set of vertical works from Sherman’s Color Studies of 1981 – 82. The series is made up of two bodies of work, but with common characteristics in their use and experimentation with color. The title itself indicates that Sherman’s interest in color takes precedence over subject, reinforced by the fact that many of the figures in this series subjects are relegated to the shadows.
‘Cindy Sherman. 1977 – 1982’ is on view now through 8 January 2023 at Hauser & Wirth Downtown Los Angeles.
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