Thursday, 21 July 2016

Research, Book Review and Major Project Influences (6): 'The Complete Untitled Film Stills' (Cindy Sherman), Museum of Modern Art, 2003

Generally regarded as being one of the most important and influential achievements of postmodernist, conceptual and photographic art, the 69 self-portraits from Cindy Sherman’s three year (1977-80) project, “The Untitled Film Stills”, are brought together in this book, produced by the Museum of Modern Art (New York), which owns the images. In this series of self-portraits Sherman delights in dressing up and acting out female roles inspired by the movie culture, mass media and advertising. Her black and white images explore the themes of contemporary culture, voyeurism, sexual desire and feminism at the time whilst simultaneously looking at the Hollywood society and exploitative advertising. A handful of Sherman’s images have become extremely well-known, but I had never seen most of the series before I read this book. In an introductory essay Sherman explains how the series came into being and how it developed, as well as commenting upon some of the individual photographs. She also arranged the sequence of pictures in the book.

Many pages have been filled with detailed interpretations of Sherman’s work, so it was refreshing to read her matter of fact introductory essay, about her interest in performance art, how she originally planned a series of stills about the same young actress’s career and then expanded her roles to include older women. She actually played male roles as well, although none of the resultant photographs were included in the series (“I guess I wasn’t in touch with my masculine side”). Interestingly, she struggled to think of more than a handful of male stereotypes whereas she could find so many female stereotypes.

The images themselves vary, both in technical quality (some of the images are blurred or [accidentally] out of focus) and in complexity. On the one hand there is a simple photograph of Sherman, wearing a snorkelling mask, face only above the water in a swimming pool (#46, taken by her niece, so not a self-portrait), which resists any kind of interpretation. On the other hand, #14 (Image 1) features a sophisticated set-up, employing a mirror, which hints that Sherman is not alone in the room where the self-portrait has been taken. This image compares well with the complexity of some of the tableaux produced at around the same time by Jeff Wall.


Image 1. Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still #14 (1978)

Some of Sherman’s images (deliberately) provoke emotion. Untitled Film Still #48 (Image 2, one of her best known photographs) shows a young actress complete with suitcase by the side of the road, waiting to hitch a lift. Her vulnerability is clear for all to see. In another image (#27) Sherman is seen sitting at a table, apparently “all cried out”. Sherman’s undoubted sex appeal, particularly in the early images, will also have had an impact on the (predominantly) male voyeur (the “male gaze”).


Image 2. Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still #48 (1979)

I was particularly interested in the tableau shown in #33 (Image 3). Sherman sits on the edge of a bed, staring at an opened letter and envelope which is also on the bed, nearer to the camera. In the background a portrait of a man (actually Sherman herself, role playing again!) can be seen in the frame.  Unfortunately this is another photograph that has not reproduced well in the book – Sherman explains some of the reasons for the reproduction problems in her essay. The picture tells a story, although we do not know what the story is. Perhaps this image is closest to the type of work that I am trying to produce for my own project, which will incorporate several self-portraits, with accompanying text, that try to convey various types of emotion.


Image 3. Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still #33 (1979)

In her essay Sherman explains how she was helped by friends and relatives during her three year quest, how she investigated using colour for the series and how the finished series ‘took off’. She tells little stories about individual images (for example the shadowy figure at the top of the flight of stairs in #65 (Image 4), which adds enormously to the atmosphere of the photograph, was a complete stranger who just happened to be coming down the steps at the moment the shutter was triggered). I was impressed by the straightforward, unpretentious style with which Sherman describes her work, which is in direct contrast to the way in which the work of her contemporaries (Jeff Wall springs to mind) is described and discussed. She even comments that she is “a little sick of these pictures”! Maybe her project was a perfect fit for the time and place, but there is no doubt that the simple but profound concept of “Untitled Film Stills” and Sherman’s determination to keep working on the project for three years, as it changed shape and became more complex, has produced one of the most important works of conceptual photographic art.


Image 4. Cindy Sherman, Untitled Film Still #65, 1980

Whilst the technical quality of some of the photographs has not stood the test of time well, the originality of the concept and the quality of the ideas behind many of the individual photographs certainly has. This work has been very influential within the art world and has helped to establish photographic art as an important medium. My own project work has already been influenced by studying reproductions of her best known work. Perhaps the success of the series comes from the fact that it will appeal, for diverse reasons, to a wide cross section of people, including those who have little or no understanding of the meaning of conceptual photographic art. In the era of the ‘selfie’, these photographs stand up proudly as a series and they will continue to do so for many years to come.



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