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Untitled

Print
1999 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons is one of the best-known Cuban artists of her generation. Her work engages with the history and traditions of the African diaspora, often referring to the religious and storytelling rituals that inform the lives of many Afro-Cubans today.

Campos-Pons was already an experienced and innovative printmaker before making this print. Here, using digital processes to create a ’layered’ image, she has 'tattooed' eyes onto a view of her own back, bringing various ideas into play. It suggests the black body as the site of a voyeuristic gaze, but the pattern also evokes a design of peacock feathers - a kind of glorious adornment of the body, especially in religious ritual.

The black scholar and intellectual W. E. B. Dubois (1868-1963) proposed that black people were perpetually aware of their inner self as seen by the white viewer. Such awareness, he said, produces a kind of divided self, to be constantly negotiated and reconciled. This print could be read as a reference to this idea of seeing oneself from the outside, in an unexpected and particular way. The print was also produced in a different colourway - with blue instead of brown eyes.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleUntitled (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour photogravure on handmade paper
Brief description
'Untitled', colour photogravure on handmade paper, by Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, printed by the Rutgers Centre for Innovative Print and Paper, United States, 1999
Physical description
Colour photogravure on handmade paper. Image predominantly in light browns of woman's back (neck to hips/waist) covered in images of eyes. The background also covered in similar eyes.
Dimensions
  • Sheet length: 32.7cm
  • Sheet width: 26cm
Production typeLimited edition
Copy number
9/14
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Magdalena Campos Pons 7/1999' (Signature and date but not clearly legible, lower right corner, pencil.)
  • 9/14 [not clearly legible] (Maker's identification; bottom left corner; pencil)
Gallery label
Gallery 100, 2016-17: Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons (born 1959) Untitled 1999 Afro-Cuban artist Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons photographed her own naked body and combined the image with printed eyes that float across the surface. The photograph can be considered a comment on the idea of the female body as the subject of a visual scrutiny. Colour photogravure on handmade paper Purchased through the Julie and Robert Breckman Print Fund Museum no. E.878-2003
Credit line
Purchased through the Julie and Robert Breckman Print Fund
Production
Attribution note: This image was also printed in a different colourway, with the eyes as blue rather than brown.
Subjects depicted
Summary
Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons is one of the best-known Cuban artists of her generation. Her work engages with the history and traditions of the African diaspora, often referring to the religious and storytelling rituals that inform the lives of many Afro-Cubans today.

Campos-Pons was already an experienced and innovative printmaker before making this print. Here, using digital processes to create a ’layered’ image, she has 'tattooed' eyes onto a view of her own back, bringing various ideas into play. It suggests the black body as the site of a voyeuristic gaze, but the pattern also evokes a design of peacock feathers - a kind of glorious adornment of the body, especially in religious ritual.

The black scholar and intellectual W. E. B. Dubois (1868-1963) proposed that black people were perpetually aware of their inner self as seen by the white viewer. Such awareness, he said, produces a kind of divided self, to be constantly negotiated and reconciled. This print could be read as a reference to this idea of seeing oneself from the outside, in an unexpected and particular way. The print was also produced in a different colourway - with blue instead of brown eyes.
Collection
Accession number
E.878-2003

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Record createdJanuary 4, 2004
Record URL
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