Sherman as Cahun (1975)

cindy sherman as claude cahun
Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Chromogenic photograph. © Cindy Sherman | src Brooklyn Museum
Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Chromogenic photograph. © Cindy Sherman | src Brooklyn Museum
Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Chromogenic photograph. © Cindy Sherman | src Brooklyn Museum
Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Chromogenic photograph. © Cindy Sherman | src Brooklyn Museum

This photograph from early in Cindy Sherman’s artistic career indicates a burgeoning interest in what has become a lifelong investigation into using herself as subject. Produced in 1975, during her time as an art student at the State University of New York, Buffalo, the work prefigures her famous Untitled Film Stills series by two years. In it, the artist references Claude Cahun, an early Surrealist photographer whose androgynous self-portraits inspired a later generation of feminist theorists to think about gender as a social role that is performed rather than innate—ideas that would become central to Sherman’s oeuvre from the mid-1970s onward.” (quoted from source)

Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Silver print with Sherman's signature, dates, and edition notation in ink, on verso. Printed 2004. | src Classic & Contemporary Photographs · Swann Galleries
Cindy Sherman :: Untitled, 1975. Silver print with Sherman’s signature, dates, and edition notation in ink, on verso. Printed 2004. | src Classic & Contemporary Photographs · Swann Galleries

Paz Errázuriz ::

[Macarena, Santiago],

from Adam’s Apple (La Manzana de Adán), 1983
Paz Errázuriz turned her gaze toward the most vulnerable and marginalized in society, documenting their existence and giving them voice, power, and the ability to be seen. In one of her most important series, La Manzana de Adán (1983), she documents the lives of Mercedes, Evelyn, and Pilar, three transvestites working in the brothels of Talca and Santiago. (Chile) / src: Artspace and une-poetique-de-lhumain