Helen-Maurene Cooper, Applbtms, from Hoodwink, 2009, pigment print, 19 x 24 in.
Still tired from Los Angeles but, will be here tonight!
See you!
Curated by Jon Feinstein
Exhibiting photographers: Claire Beckett, Helen–Maurene Cooper, Andrea Robbins and Max Becher, and Michael Bühler-Rose
On view: January 21 – February 27, 2010
Opening reception: Thursday, January 21 – 6 – 8 p.m.
Hendershot Gallery
547 West 27th Street, Suite 504
New York, New York 10001
(212) 239–3085 | hendershotgallery.com
Gallery hours: Tuesday–Saturday 11 – 6 p.m.
This group exhibition explores the fascination with “the other” through gendered, sexual, racial and subcultural costuming. The exhibiting photographers depict Europeans and Westerners who glamorize and vilify other cultures, at times presenting them as the enemy, while at others declaring them a cultural muse. On the surface, the latter appears to be an attempt to understand or elevate them, but in many cases this actually leads to further complication by turning their identities into caricatures. This exhibition also explores the motivations for this role-play: is it an act of mere flattery? What does it mean to try on the skin or cultural signifiers of another?
For more information, please contact Heidi Prenevost at (212) 239–3085 or via email at heidi@hendershotgallery.com.
Curated by Jon Feinstein
Exhibiting photographers: Claire Beckett, Helen–Maurene Cooper, Andrea Robbins and Max Becher, and Michael Bühler-Rose
On view: January 21 – February 27, 2010
Opening reception: Thursday, January 21 – 6 – 8 p.m.
Hendershot Gallery
547 West 27th Street, Suite 504
New York, New York 10001
(212) 239–3085 | hendershotgallery.com
Gallery hours: Tuesday–Saturday 11 – 6 p.m.
This group exhibition explores the fascination with “the other” through gendered, sexual, racial and subcultural costuming. The exhibiting photographers depict Europeans and Westerners who glamorize and vilify other cultures, at times presenting them as the enemy, while at others declaring them a cultural muse. On the surface, the latter appears to be an attempt to understand or elevate them, but in many cases this actually leads to further complication by turning their identities into caricatures. This exhibition also explores the motivations for this role-play: is it an act of mere flattery? What does it mean to try on the skin or cultural signifiers of another?
For more information, please contact Heidi Prenevost at (212) 239–3085 or via email at heidi@hendershotgallery.com.
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