![]() In an era of hyper pop-politics circulated by social media where anything can be commodified, can a brand actually be an ally in the fight for liberation? By positioning her body as a target of transphobia and racism, the artist subverts the language of marketing and discloses the ways in which supremacy can replicate in the form of a new ad campaign. In this billboard, Gutierrez uses the language of advertisements to expose the ways in which companies are complicit in reproducing ideals anchored in whiteness and gender normativity. Made in the signature style of Gutierrez’s chameleonic photo-performances, Supremacy continues the artist’s investigation of archetypes of women celebrated by media as brand ambassadors of beauty and authenticity. Written boldly in white, Supremacy is the brand. ![]() In this advertisement, the model is under attack by figurines representing sexist ideals of perfection. The expression one might have mistaken for pleasure now reads of pain and the pose, in this context, resembles a chalk outline drawn at a crime scene. One pulls Gutierrez’s hair, another pushes her thigh. Closer inspection reveals, however, that these are not innocent dolls. Blonde Barbie-like dolls are scattered across her body, echoing her lingerie and pose. 1989), in an image that she also conceived, produced, and photographed. With mouth open in an apparent state of rapture, the model is played by LGBTQ rights activist and artist Martine Gutierrez (b. In Martine Gutierrez’s Supremacy a brunette model lies on a saccharine pink shaggy rug-her “broken doll” pose recalls Tyra Banks’s early-aughts show America’s Next Top Model.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |