MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTS AND SAN DIEGO MUSEUM OF ART CO-HOST MAJOR EXHIBITION EXPLORING THE HISTORY OF
RACIAL REPRESENTATION IN AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHY
Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self
October 1-December 31, 2005
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SAN DIEGO—This fall, in a joint collaboration, the San Diego Museum of Art (SDMA) and the Museum of
Photographic Arts (MoPA) are presenting more than 250 works of photography that reveal the tumultuous history of the
representation of race in America. Titled Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self and organized by the
International Center of Photography in New York, this exhibition is the first comprehensive view of how photography has
shaped both stereotypes and changing perceptions of what Americans look like. In addition, the two museums are
co-hosting a related film series.
"No issue has generated more heat in America than race. Photography is one of the principal formats for communicating ideas
about it," says Arthur Ollman, director of MoPA. "The Museum of Photographic Arts is delighted to share this important
and powerful exhibition with our friends at the San Diego Museum of Art. Our collaboration makes us both stronger
and more vital."
"The San Diego Museum of Art is proud to co-present this groundbreaking exhibition with our colleague institution, MoPA,"
says Derrick Cartwright, SDMA's executive director. "This important exhibition takes a bold approach in challenging
how photography shapes understanding of racial identity."
Dating from the mid-19th century to the present, the works in Only Skin Deep range from daguerreotypes to
vintage postcards, film stills, prints from negatives, and digital images. The exhibition also spans a wide range of
genres and movements, including commercial photography, portraiture, social documentary, photojournalism,
ethnographic and scientific photography, Pictorialism, Surrealism, reportage, and erotica.
The images created in these varied styles offer a critical rereading of the archive of the history of
photography. This applies to the works of famous photographerssuch as Dorothea Lange, Margaret Bourke-White, and
Edward Steichenas well as lesser-known historical figures,
including Charles Eisenmann, Will Soule, and Toyo Miyatake. Contemporary artists and photographers who have moved beyond
the multi-cultural approach to representations of "race" are also prominently featured in the exhibition. They include
Nancy Burson, Nikki S. Lee, Glenn Ligon, Paul Pfeiffer, Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie, Cindy Sherman, Lorna Simpson, and
Andres Serrano, among many more.
Other photographers represented in Only Skin Deep, such as Ansel Adams, O. Winston Link, and Man Ray, may not be
known as commentators on race but nonetheless created works that speak about it. The exhibition also raises crucial
questions about how ideas of race permeate culture through a variety of images from the realms of abstraction,
landscape photography, and photo documentation of landart genres in which the figure is not central or even visible.
Engaging some of the most profound and explosive issues in contemporary life, this exhibition explores how
photography has shaped Americans' understanding of nation, race, ethnicity, and self. Even as symbols,
photographs depicting ethnic difference and cultural superiority have real consequences in everyday life.
Co-curator Coco Fusco remarks in her essay: "The photographic image plays a central role in American culture. Americans
are avid producers and consumers of photographs and as our culture shifts from being predominantly print-based to
image-based, we grow increasingly reliant on photographs for information about histories and realities that we
do not experience directly. But we also create and use photography to see ourselves. By looking at pictures we
imagine that we can know who we are and who we were... No other means of representing human likeness has been
used more systematically to describe and formulate American identity than photography. "By examining from a
perspective that neither accuses nor valorizes, but rather studies their social impact, Only Skin Deep explores
ways in which photographs make cultural classifications visible, understandable, and useful.
As an inquiry into racial and ethnic imagery as opposed to one that examines racism, Only Skin Deep features
works that evoke popularly held ideas about raceregardless of the intent of the photographers who took them. Further,
this exhibition moves beyond considering race in terms of black versus white by including representations of most ethnic
groups in the United States, and, in particular, breaks new ground by considering the myriad depictions of white
Americans.
Exhibition Sections
Arranged into five thematic groups, Only Skin Deep shows how racial imagery is organized
in binary terms: normal vs. abnormal, order vs. disorder, beauty vs. ugliness, mind vs. body, individual vs. type, and
progress vs. backwardness. These oppositions are enforced by some of the exhibiting photographers and subverted by
others. The themes are:
Looking Up/Looking Down demonstrates how racial hierarchies can be either based in truth or subverted through
irony and parody. Some of the subjects in this section have been denigrated while others are idealized by
the photographers.
All for One/One for All presents photographs that suggest an "ideal" American, while others
represent specific ethnic or racial types.
Humanized/Fetishized contrasts photographs designed to emphasize a subject's uniqueness with those that
objectify and dehumanize it. Some images in this group express their ideas about race through the depiction
of space and objects rather than human beings.
Assimilate/Impersonate compares subjects who are represented as good candidates for assimilation with those
who emulate the characteristics of non-white racial groups.
Progress/Regress focuses on how some images of racial groups represent America's future while others
evoke its pre-industrial past. Featured in this section of the exhibition are images that extend the theme
beyond the body into space and illustrates how racial ideas can be imposed onto natural and man-made
landscapes.
Only Skin Deep is a Millennium Project supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts with major
funding provided by Corbis, Altria Group, Inc., The Rockefeller Foundation and Ford Foundation, and additional
support from Samuel L. and Dominique Milbank and from the Third Millennium Foundation.
Symposium: Visualizing Race in American Photography
(Oct. 1, 2005)
In conjunction with Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self, the San Diego Museum of Art
in collaboration with the UCSD Visual Arts Department presents "Visualizing Race in American Photography" on
Saturday, October 1, 2005. This symposium will focus on the role photography has played in the development of
racial and national identity in the United States. The panel brings together scholars and critics, including Coco
Fusco, Richard Meyer, Malik Gaines, Ken Gonzales Day, and will be moderated by Roberto Tejada. This symposium is
free and will be held in SDMA's James S. Copley Auditorium from 10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Only Skin Deep Film Series
The San Diego Museum of Art and the Museum of Photographic Arts are presenting a four-part film series in
conjunction with the exhibition Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self. Screenings
take place at MoPA in the Joan and Irwin Jacobs Theater and ticket prices ($7 members/$10 nonmembers/$8 students)
include same-day admission to both museums. Tickets may be purchased in advance at SDMA or on the day of the film
at MoPA. Films include To Kill a Mockingbird (10/13/05), Gringo in Mañanaland (10/27/05),
Smoke Signals (11/10/05), and Rabbit in the Moon (11/17/05). All films begin at 7:00 p.m.
Ticketing Information
Patrons visiting either MoPA or SDMA can receive a $2 discount off the adult ticket price at one venue with the
presentation of a ticket stub or membership card from the other venue. This offer is valid during the run of the
exhibition, October 1 through December 31, 2005.
Exhibition Curators
This exhibition is organized by Brian Wallis, ICP director of exhibitions and chief curator, and Coco Fusco, an
interdisciplinary artist, critic, and associate professor in the Visual Arts Division at Columbia University's
School of the Arts.
Exhibition Catalogue
The fully illustrated, 416-page catalogue edited by Brian Wallis and Coco Fusco, the exhibition's
co-curators, contains essays by scholars, artists' statements, brief biographies of the artists,
and extensive bibliographic data.
Museum Information
Museum of Photographic Arts
1649 El Prado
San Diego, CA 92101
General Information: (619) 238-7559 / Facsimile (619) 238-8777
Web site: www.mopa.org
San Diego Museum of Art
1450 El Prado, Balboa Park
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 122107
San Diego, CA 92112-2107
General Information: (619) 232-7931 / Facsimile: (619) 232-9367
Group Sales: (619) 696-1915
Web site: www.sdmart.org