In Conversation
Cindy Sherman
Cindy Sherman sat down with Derek Blasberg to discuss her critically acclaimed exhibition at London’s National Portrait Gallery, her solitary process, and selfies.
I think they are the most realistic characters I have done. I completely empathised with them. They could be me. That's what was really scary, how easy it was to make myself look like that.
—Cindy Sherman
Gagosian Gallery will present a series of new photographs by Cindy Sherman.
Working as her own model for more than thirty years, Sherman has endlessly transformed herself to address the complexities of identity through her photographs, which she fully controls as author, director, and stylist. A consummate performer, Sherman captures every possible distortion of her face and body on camera, drastically manipulating her weight or shape, coaxing the most nuanced expressions from her supple features, and refining every detail, from fingernails to props. Over time she has assumed a myriad of identities, from fraught adolescent to suburban housewife to social vamp to Renaissance aristocrat, claiming as her own the vast range of social and psychological spaces that women have inhabited throughout history.
Sherman's latest photographs depict wealthy middle-aged American women, past their prime physically but at the height of their social powers, protected by their sartorial armor yet utterly exposed by the camera — and our scrutiny. These savage portrayals suggest a disconcerting liminal space between fiction and reality where pathos rules. Expensively attired, expertly coiffed and made-up, and framed by the elaborate architectural or landscape settings of their privileged lives, these carefully constructed women begin to crumble under the camera's impassive gaze. At first glance, each of them is projected from a vantage of comfort and success, rendered on a scale that recalls the impressive portraits commissioned by wealthy patrons during the Renaissance. But the enlarged scale has a cruelly adverse effect, drawing attention to their every imperfection –the age-spots, the wrinkles, the sagging skin, and ill-fitting, sometimes garish clothes. Moreover, on closer scrutiny the backgrounds reveal themselves to be separate from the characters that they frame, shot elsewhere and after the fact, then added digitally to complete – and at the same time, undermine – the composition.
Cindy Sherman sat down with Derek Blasberg to discuss her critically acclaimed exhibition at London’s National Portrait Gallery, her solitary process, and selfies.
The Spring 2020 issue of Gagosian Quarterly is now available, featuring Cindy Sherman’s Untitled #412 (2003) on its cover.
An exhibition at Gagosian, Paris, is raising funds to aid in the reconstruction of the Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Paris following the devastating fire of April 2019. Gagosian directors Serena Cattaneo Adorno and Jean-Olivier Després spoke to Jennifer Knox White about the generous response of artists and others, and what the restoration of this iconic structure means across the world.
Jenny Saville reveals the process behind her new self-portrait, painted in response to Rembrandt’s masterpiece Self-Portrait with Two Circles.