“If you’re dancing in a disco all night your feet get dirty,
even if you have the most expensive shoes on.”
Marilyn Minter
even if you have the most expensive shoes on.”
Marilyn Minter
When American artist Marilyn
Minter was a student at Syracuse University she took a series of
photographs of her mother into class. Visiting lecturer Diane Arbus was
impressed, her fellow students horrified. The photographs depicted her pill-addicted
mother wearing a wig, dressed in a negligee applying makeup, smoking and
lounging in bed.
As Artforum’s Bruce Hainley is
reported to
have written 27 years later “the
esthetic of wig governs everything, suggesting that beauty, like existence, is
artificial, askew, and concealing.” But at the time, for the 21 year old wannabe
artist such future pronouncements were unthinkable, she had grown up drawing
glamour girls in the margins of her textbooks. And as she told Newsweek’s
Isabel Wilkinson “All of a sudden I got the picture: this is not what other
people’s mothers look like.”
It took Minter almost three decades of a drug
addled life in New York to overcome this peer pressure and exhibit the
photographs. And in so doing Minter expanded upon Hainley’s observations to
explore the feminine role in contemporary society in general and the fashion
and porn industries in particular with a focus on the internet and advertising.
As she told W
Magazine “I work with things that are considered debased and shallow, but
the reality is that there'd be no Internet without porn and that fashion and
beauty are multi-billion dollar industries…I was, and still am, a second wave
feminist, and I believe that no one has politically correct fantasies…The
fashion world tells me how much they love my work, but they don't hire me very
often. Tom Ford did, and he
hated it. Naturally, he wanted to Photoshop away the imperfections, which is
perfectly understandable. They want their vision.”
Minter’s vision is the obscured reality of these industries; she
concentrates on the imperfections that make us human, the freckles, the sweat,
the under arm stubble that the glossy’s airbrush out. As the publicity for her
latest exhibition states, “Minter progresses
from a curious youth looking critically at the domestic landscape before her to
the media-savvy cultural producer whose images simultaneously define and
critique our times.”
Or as she would put it, “If you
really have something to say, sooner or later it will be heard. And if you're
lucky you'll still be alive.”
Her latest exhibition : Pretty/Dirty is
currently on show at the Contemporary
Arts Museum Houston until the 2nd of August.
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