States of Union
Throughout its history, portraiture has been used to memorialize family lineage and honor family patriarchs and matriarchs. While heterosexual families have a pronounced and illustrated legacy, gay unions have not been acknowledged in the ledgers of history. Through States of Union, same-sex families will be able to claim their place in history and within the centuries-old legacy of portraiture.
The photographs that make up States of Union loosely reference historical portraits. Through gesture, lighting, size and formality, the images recall artists such as Manet, Renoir, Paxton and Sargent and pay homage to the original purpose of portraiture: the glorification of the individual and the family. By drawing upon classical images, the tropes historically used to promote heterosexual family units are re-appropriated and reinvented to serve a more expanded view of family. In so doing, the viewer recognizes something familiar about the images, including their artistic references, feeling a kinship with families that might otherwise look and feel unrecognizable.
Comments 0
Say something