Through works that incorporate hundreds of original and found vintage photographs of African Americans that she collects from eBay and flea markets, Lorna Simpson undermines the assumption that archival materials are objective documents of history. Lorna Simpson: Gathered presents works that explore this Brooklyn-born artist’s interest in the interplay between fact and fiction, identity and history. ![]() By positioning herself as a contemporary reflection of an unknown individual from fifty years ago, Simpson seems to be trying to replicate the original person’s experience, perhaps in order to catch a glimmer of a life that can never really be known. In response to this lack of information and to the artifice and apparent self-consciousness of the models’ poses, Simpson made her own self-portraits mimicking the originals, marking the first time the artist has included her own image in her work. But the questions the photographs raise easily outnumber any known facts about the subjects. By the 1950s, the ubiquity of the pinup, combined with the popularity of camera clubs for hobbyists, resulted in a burgeoning cottage industry for amateur girlie pictures like the ones seen here. Most of the photographs resemble pinups, mass-produced images popularized in the World War II era that showed a pretty girl, often a B-movie actress, in a seductive pose. Simpson found a large group of photographs on eBay of an African American woman-and in several instances, a young man-posing in modest domestic settings in Los Angeles in 1957. Simpson has compared these to the paper residue found in old photo albums where images have been torn out. This sense of a missing history is reinforced by the shadow images interspersed among the photographs. While the portraits are captivating, the lack of information and personal detail about the sitters can be heartrending. ![]() In this context, private photo-booth portraits take on greater cultural significance, as many were carefully crafted messages sent back home to loved ones. Coinciding with the mass availability of this new technology was the “Great Migration” of an estimated two million African Americans from the southern states to the industrialized North, an exodus driven by a search for employment opportunities and escape from the overt racism of the South. The photo booth debuted in New York City in 1925, quickly becoming a popular form of entertainment while also serving as a practical and inexpensive way for people to make images of themselves. For this unique installation, Simpson recombines three of these works into one large arrangement. Simpson has collected large numbers of historical images of unidentified African Americans posing for photo-booth portraits and integrated them into a series of multipart pieces.
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