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>> Interview: Louise Bourgeois
>> Career Women and Material Girls
>> The Legend's Burden: Eva Hesse
>> Close Up: Katharina Sieverding

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A conflict that concerns many contemporary women artists becomes visible in Trockel's work. Basically, works by women almost always provoke a dual read: as soon as they address the relationship between women and the art establishment, they become the work's subject and statement at one and the same time. Nobody would scrutinize a self-portrait of Max Beckmann's to see what it says about masculinity in general. On the other hand, works by women artists are all too often examined in light of what they say about the role of women in society. In other words: men are easily accorded the right to individuality, while women artists are always perceived as representatives of their sex.


Katharina Sieverding, Reproduction 1976
Deutsche Bank Collection

A number of contemporary artists work counter to this questionable attitude. Those using self-portrait today understand the degree of staging they're dealing with, and that it's their own image alone that affords them flexibility in form without having to take society's expectations into account. The most famous example of this method is Katharina Sieverding. Ever since the late sixties, her works have been based on the photographs she takes of herself - often mere photo-booth pictures of her face that are later followed by canvas-sized prints. Sieverding, who was born in 1944 in Prague, has coined a look in which image and statement converge: just as Warhol made the hundredfold likenesses of Marilyn Monroe or Jackie Kennedy the motifs of his silkscreens, Sieverding varies her outer appearance in minimal ways, thus forming the endless series of her works. Throughout the process, the photographs achieve a high degree of abstraction, while the artist's face often appears as nothing more than a sketch of harsh contours emphasized by garish makeup. Carried to the point of becoming a mask, the portrait loses it personal and private expression: Sieverding becomes her own role model. Sometimes it's the diva that dominates in the photographs, and sometimes it's the enigmatic face of a sphinx that peers out from beneath the surface, and sometimes, despite her femininity, the face looks as distorted and artificial as a drag queen's. Sieverding incorporates this continuous process of metamorphosis: in 1974, for the series Transformer, she superimposed photographs of herself with those of her partner Klaus Mettig in such a way that androgynous portraits emerged from the montage. The artist deconstructs her own image, and in doing so turns it into art. Thus, Sieverding carefully guards over her own image, always exercising precise control in objectifying the subjective component.
Katharina Sieverding, ID/IV-V, 1992
Deutsche Bank Collection

Although Cindy Sherman works with self-portrait as well, her art progresses in a diametrically opposed direction. Whether it's in the film stills of the seventies, the splatter scenes, the clown series, or in the portraits of women fashioned after former centuries: Sherman is always the person hiding beneath the masquerade. Yet in the beginning it was an entirely practical consideration that led her to pose for her own work, as Sherman once explained in an interview: "As a model, I'm willing to do anything I demand of myself." Once again, the woman artist finds herself in a dual role as producer and object at the same time. Indeed, the New York-based artist photographer uses her face and body to transform into an alien figure. Yet here too, the depiction of the other is an attempt to visually escape the generalized view of the phenomenon of woman. In her various female roles, Sherman shows just how much she can turn herself into fiction - and into a phantom. In this sense, the art critic Isabell Graw remarks that Sherman herself has become the medium of her own appropriation: "On the one hand, she takes the risk lurking in every performance: that of physically exposing herself and becoming vulnerable. On the other hand, Sherman chooses the medium of theatrical dress and the format of photographic reproduction to establish distance to her own person."


Cindy Sherman: Untitled, from the series "For Joseph Beuys", 1986
Deutsche Bank Collection


At its core, it would seem that Graw's observation applies to all women artists working with self-portrait. The medium offers a means to expose, via staging, the construct of the underlying gender role. One could call it the "Madonna Factor," in that the pop star has been adopting rapidly changing images from the very beginning and replacing them on a steady basis. As a woman, Madonna is open to a multitude of projections, while the viewer has trouble finding out what her position really is regarding this spectacle of narcissism and feminine myths. Evidently, Madonna also took a liking to Cindy Sherman's game of hide and seek - the Queen of Pop sponsored Sherman's 1997 exhibition The Complete Untitled Film Stills at the MoMA.


Miwa Yanagi: White Casket, o. J.
Deutsche Bank Collection

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