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Title

Untitled #113

1982

Artist

Cindy Sherman

United States of America

19 Jan 1954 –

  • Details

    Other Titles
    MP#113
    Untitled 1982
    Date
    1982
    Media category
    Photograph
    Materials used
    type C photograph
    Edition
    edition of 10
    Dimensions
    114.9 x 76.2 cm sheet; 118.8 x 79.5 x 3.7 cm frame
    Signature & date

    Signed and dated verso, ink "Cindy Sherman 1982".

    Credit
    Purchased with funds provided by the Mervyn Horton Bequest 1986
    Location
    Not on display
    Accession number
    372.1986
    Copyright
    © Courtesy Cindy Sherman and Metro Pictures

    Reproduction requests

    Artist information
    Cindy Sherman

    Works in the collection

    6

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  • About

    Cindy Sherman’s series ‘Untitled film stills’ took place over a five-year period beginning in 1977 when she was 23 years old. In small black-and-white photographs, she impersonated various female character types from old B-grade movies and film noir. As both performer and director, Sherman investigated the diverse ways in which glamorous mass-mediated images socialise us or discipline us, fool us or placate us. In her single-frame movies she showed moments when desire and reality, personal and collective memory, are merged. Carefully selecting costume, wig, make-up and props, as in ‘Untitled film still #35’ 1979 (AGNSW collection), Sherman mobilises a set of informational cues for triggering a daydream or reverie. With clever framing, lighting and composition, the movie fiction of a character is shown in vulnerable solitude. And we get a sense that the character is being watched, that she is the object of someone’s gaze. Since Sherman’s characters are not specified – they seem blank, vacant or absent-minded – we are free to construct our own narratives for these women.

    Sherman’s later ‘Untitled film stills’ were in colour and employed rear-screen projection. The change suggested a move to the 1960s and 70s rather than the 1950s, evoking TV rather than the big screen. In this colour series the women seem less like victims or ‘femmes fatales’, more confident and independent. This was followed by a series of what appeared to be centrefolds. By copying mass-mediated modes and genres she subverts them, reversing male and female subject positions, and leaving us unsettled by the ambivalence.

    In subsequent work, while exploring the strange and surreal world of fairytales, Sherman herself appears more doll-like. Using prostheses and plastic props beasts become hybrid human-doll creatures hidden among abject detritus. The piecemeal body (recalling surrealist Hans Bellmer’s ‘La demie poupée’ - AGNSW collection) reveals a fundamental aspect of our selves: our erotic imagination driven by the unconscious. It is as though the repressed and mistreated body has come back to haunt our surface selves obsessed as we are with mannequin perfection.

    © Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection Handbook, 2006

  • Exhibition history

    Shown in 8 exhibitions

  • Bibliography

    Referenced in 8 publications

Other works by Cindy Sherman

See all 6 works