Chicago Sun-Times

‘ Dress codes’ exhibit opens door on ‘ who they are’

VIEWPOINT

- LAURA WASHINGTON Email: LauraSWash­ington@ aol. com

Muholi pursues her work as social commentary. Her lesbian photograph­s represent a wide range.

What does a lesbian look like? She is dressed in crisp, black and white racing stripes, flanked by a wall of psychedeli­c images. She blows out of the frame.

She is donned in a white baseball cap. She gives a punky nod, shirt collar stands defiantly around a slim neck.

Her eagle- bald head, framed by gold hoop earrings, beckons you with bedroom eyes.

They are all lesbians. Black lesbians.

I wasn’t prepared for the stunning 20- inch by 30- inch photograph­s of six black lesbians now showing at The Art Institute. But there they were, demanding I see them in new ways.

The exhibit’s accompanyi­ng text quotes the artist, the celebrated South African photograph­er Zanele Muholi. She asks:

“What does a lesbian look like? Is there a lesbian aesthetic or do we express our gendered, racialized, and classed selves in rich and diverse ways? I wanted the viewer to ask herself— is this lesbian more authentic than that lesbian because one wears a tie and the other not? Is this a man or a woman, or a transman? Can you identify a rape survivor by the clothes she wears?”

I asked: Are they who you think they are?

Muholi’s portraits are part of a larger exhibit: “Dress Codes: Portrait Photograph­s from the Collection.”

The Art Institute gleaned photograph­s it owns from Zanele Muholi’s “Faces and Phases” series. Since 2006, Muholi, a celebrated South African photograph­er, has been creating “a visual history of black lesbians in South Africa,” said Michal Raz- Russo, the Ruttenberg Associate Curator of Photograph­y at the Art Institute.

“The question [ Muholi] was posing was, ‘ how do you make visible an oppressed group within a much larger oppressed group?’” RazRusso said in an interview.

Muholi considers herself both an activist and artist and pursues her work as social commentary.

Her lesbian photograph­s represent a wide range. Some women are masculine in appearance, others more feminine, Raz- Russo said. “A lot of these women have been victims of a range of crimes and have been assaulted in many ways.”

The African continent owns a long, sordid history of heinous discrimina­tion and violence against LGBTQ people. In Africa, homophobia has licensed to black people to hate their own.

America is hardly immune. In February, a 24- year- old transgende­r woman, Tiara Richmond, also known as Keke Collier, was murdered on Chicago’s South Side. Nationally, 23 transgende­r people lost their lives to violence in 2017, according to the Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ civil rights group.

The starkly elegant portraits depict blackwomen dressed in “traditiona­lly male” attire. In a cap, sweater vest, long tie, a pair of Levis, they pose proudly, unapologet­ically.

“The whole idea was to look at dress as one door that opens” said Raz- Russo, on “who they are.”

We project our own biases on those different from us. The greater the difference, the bigger the bias.

I know many black lesbians. I have often wondered why many ( though not all) tend to dress “mannish.”

Maybe, because they want to. It’s not a code. It’s who they are.

“Dress Codes,” showing through April 22, presents five series of photograph­s, spanning the 1870s to the present. Follow Laura Washington on Twitter:@ Media Dervish

 ?? | COURTESY OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO ?? Bakhambile Skhosana, Natalsprui­t is a portrait by Zanele Muholi from the series “Faces and Phases, 2010.”
| COURTESY OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO Bakhambile Skhosana, Natalsprui­t is a portrait by Zanele Muholi from the series “Faces and Phases, 2010.”
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