© Ellen Gallagher
Currently not on view
Duke,
2004
Ellen Gallagher, born 1965, Providence, RI; active Rotterdam, Netherlands, and New York, NY
Printed and published by Two Palms Press
Printed and published by Two Palms Press
2004-449
Gallagher has long been fascinated by representations of race in the media and by the performance of race by individuals. Duke is titled after the eponymous hair pomade and takes its inspiration from a series of advertisements published in African American magazines after World War II. Products such as wigs, skin creams, and hair pomades (actual dollops of which adorn the heads seen here) offered a culturally-defined vision of beauty inextricably intertwined with the politics of race in mid-twentieth-century America. As Gallagher has said, such goods signal everything from “anxiety about assimilation and integration” to “hope, whimsy, and self-determination.” They are about life "despite/around/within stereotypes.”
Information
Title
Duke
Dates
2004
Maker
Medium
Photogravure with laser-incised peeled paper, collage, and hair pomade
Dimensions
36.5 x 25 cm (14 3/8 x 9 13/16 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
2004-449
Place Made
North America, United States, New York, New York
Culture
Type
Techniques
Subject