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Wigs
Image Not Available for Wigs

Wigs

Artist Lorna Simpson American, born 1960
Date1994
DimensionsOverall (see remarks field for panel sizes): 72 x 162 1/2 in. (182.9 x 412.8 cm)
18 panels at 23 x 18 1/2 in. each
3 panels at 32 x 16 in. each
18 small text panels at various sizes
MediumWaterless lithograph on felt
ClassificationPrints
Credit LineGift of Mrs. Webster Plass and of Miss Elsie C. Mershon in memory of Edward C. Mershon, by exchange
Object number
2007.7E
Not on View
Published ReferencesThe Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo Museum of Art Masterworks, Toledo, 2009, p. 352, repr. (col.).Exhibition HistoryToledo Museum of Art, PICTURE ID: Contemporary African American Works on Paper, March 14-June 14, 2020.Label TextWhat does your hair mean to you? How does it reflect or shape your identity? Do you think people sometimes assume things about you based on your hairstyle? In Wigs, Lorna Simpson presents an array of wigs and hairpieces—everything from braids, weaves, falls, and Barbie Doll blonde locks to male facial hair—to raise the issue of how hair has played a central role in African-American cultural and personal identity, especially in relationship to traditional white standards of beauty. She printed her photographic images of the hairpieces onto felt, adding a tactile element to the work (but please don’t touch it!). Though her work frequently deals with issues of race, gender, class, and identity, she leaves any precise interpretation of her images and text—and how they interact—up to the viewer.

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