Los Angeles Times

Startling scenes of body, object

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The governing logic of Heather Rasmussen’s photograph­s at Acme is Surrealism, the movement by which the familiar becomes dream-like and strange. The artist photograph­s herself with mirrors, vegetables, furniture and blankets to create beguiling tableaux that explore the line between body and object.

In most of the images, Rasmussen is holding a mirror, a visual trope borrowed from artist Hans Breder. In a 1960s series, he photograph­ed women gripping mirrors that obscured their faces so that their other body parts were reflected in startling, sometimes grotesque arrangemen­ts.

Rasmussen uses mirrors in much the same way, creating images in which she has three or more legs, or where her body is interpenet­rated with reflection­s of the room around her. These distortion­s are augmented by the inclusion of sculptural casts of her legs, and large squashes whose shapes mimic limbs or other body parts. The results are strange amalgamati­ons that are neither fully human nor simply objects.

In this, they invoke the still-life tradition in which flowers or fruit serve as metaphors for mortality. The show also includes a table bearing vegetables in various states of freshness, a prosthetic foot and small sculptures of feet and legs. “Untitled (Studio Cornucopia Self-Portrait)” is a photograph of a similar mix, with the addition of a tiny mirror that reflects the artist’s face.

Rasmussen also employs the vocabulary of commercial photograph­y, with its seamless backdrops and f lat lighting, further suggesting that the body is an object or a product.

Lastly, the images are part of a long, feminist tradition of using photograph­y to make the body strange. Foremother­s Ana Mendieta, Eleanor Antin and Cindy Sherman come to mind. But whereas those artists were in some part critiquing female stereotype­s, Rasmussen’s works are more ambivalent. Perhaps it is because her appearance — young, white, thin, longlimbed— fits so comfortabl­y within convention­al notions of female beauty. Despite intimation­s of death and decay, her colorful images come across as playful and appealing, not as grotesque critiques. Still, hers is the type of body so often turned into a product. By making it strange, Rasmussen suggests that while objectific­ation may be inevitable, perhaps in the end it’s less about sex and more about squash.

Acme, 2939 Denby Ave., L.A. Through June 10; closed Sundays and Mondays. (323) 741-0330, www.acmelosang­eles.com

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