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Self Portrait in Fun House Mirror, 1955

William Witt

Artwork Details

Self Portrait in Fun House Mirror, 1955
1955
William Witt
gelatin silver print on paper
11 x 14 in. (27.94 x 35.56 cm);18 x 22 in. (45.72 x 55.88 cm)
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. James Agah, Class of 1989 (BBA)
2017/2.300

Description

After World War II, William Witt explored the busy streets of New York City with his camera, photographing uncanny juxtapositions of architecture and signage. In The Eye, Lower East Side, New York, he presents a shop sign advertising eye exams, framing the scene from an elevated and angled perspective so that the eyes on the sign and window unsettlingly meet the viewer's gaze. While the eyes call attention to the acts of looking and seeing, the signs themselves block any view of what lies beyond them.

In Self-Portrait in Fun House Mirror, Witt creates another image that explores the act of looking. In this photograph, he frames a curious view in which a woman's body is humorously halved by a grid of mirrors. Though Witt's reflection is visible on the right, his face, like that of his female counterpart on the opposite side of the mirror, is blocked by the camera.

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