Heidi Fancher, Commended Artist, Portrait Competition 2013
Publisher |
Smithsonian
Media Type |
video
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
History
Society & Culture
Visual Arts
Publication Date |
Jul 16, 2013
Episode Duration |
00:01:59
Interview with artist Heidi Fancher, Commended Artist, Portrait Competition 2013
Interview with Heidi Fancher, commended artist at the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition 2013 for her work "For Delia." Heidi Fancher writes: "The inspiration for my work is taken from my archival research into the philosophical, pseudo-scientific, and religious foundations of racism. In this piece, I am exploring how the Age of Reason's reliance on physical appearance as scientific fact justified the dehumanization of non-European groups to the position of chattel. Delia was a slave who was photographed by Joseph Zealy in 1850, in South Carolina. The series of Zealy's photographs was used to support naturalist Louis Agassiz's premise that Africans were biologically inferior to Europeans. 162 years later, I revisit Agassiz's premise in the hopes of exposing Delia's humanity, nobility, and beauty. In exposing the humanity of Delia, I seek to open a discourse about how science, religion, and appearance obfuscate issues of identity and 'otherness' in our world." "For Delia" / Heidi Fancher / C-print, 2010 / Collection of the artist. Music: "Budding" by Broke for Free: http://freemusicarchive.org/search/?quicksearch=broke+for+free . Used under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (aka Music Sharing) License.

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