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Today at the Museum

May 19, 2013

China Art Cart

Noon – 2 p.m.

LES FLÂNEUSES

This image is presented as a "thumbnail" because it is protected by copyright. The Minneapolis Institute of Arts respects the rights of artists who retain the copyright to their work.

Title:LES FLÂNEUSES
Artist:Ghada Amer
Date:2008
Creation Place:Africa, Egypt
Credit Line:Gift of funds from Alfred and Ingrid Lenz Harrison
Image Copyright:© Ghada Amer
Accession Number:2010.52
Ghada Amer was born in Cairo, Egypt in 1963. At the age of 11, her family moved to France where Amer studied painting at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Nice and the Institut des hautes Etudes en Arts Plastiques in Paris. Although Amer also creates sculpture, installations, and performance pieces, she has always referred to herself as a painter. Using traditional embroidery techniques and an acrylic gel medium to fix the thread to the canvas, Amer drew images of women performing domestic tasks. By using needlework, Amer elevated craft to the level of fine art. In Les Flâneuses, Amer uses embroidery—a medium typically associated with women’s domestic life—to create images that frankly explore aspects of female sexuality. She “draws” with thread, creating complex networks of lines, in which erotic images are partially concealed. In this work, Amer juxtaposes pornographic-magazine photographs of sexualized women with images of the innocent young girls of Walt Disney’s film version of Snow White. By bringing together two female stereotypes in this signature work, Amer illustrates how women have been marginalized. The word flaneuses refers to a French term coined by Baudelaire - le flaneur: a man who walks the city to observe and participate in the urban experience. The term is associated with an understanding of modern society in relationship to the individual, a theme Amer is also exploring in her work.