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Laurie Simmons, an American contemporary photographer who captures photos of dolls, talked Tuesday at the Sackler Museum about the unique focus of her most recent photos—a life-sized Japanese sex doll.
Her newest series, called “The Love Doll,” features the doll in different scenes, including a nude photo of the doll playing on the floor with a puppy, a photo of the doll wearing twenty pounds of jewelry, and a few photos where the doll is dressed as an authentic geisha.
“By using dolls, inanimate objects, I can get more quickly to the core of emotions than when using other people,” Simmons said. “I keep having to say something about the subject of a woman as expressed through a photo.”
Simmons said she has always been drawn to photographing dolls. After coming to New York City in the 1970s and briefly shooting photographs for a toy catalogue, she started using dolls, dollhouses, and dummies in her work.
Although she has focused on female subjects during his entire career as a photographer, she said her earlier photos connote themes of nostalgia and memory in scenes of domestic, middle class life.
“I have always been drawn to a kind of nostalgia,” Simmons said.
One of her more recent projects was a 2006 musical film, The Music of Regret. The protagonist, played by Meryl Streep, begins the movie as a doll made in Simmons’ own image. Simmons said that—unlike photography, which captures a single moment—film moves with explicit linearity.
“I never think about the story,” Simmons said. “I always wanted it to feel like almost a daydreaming, natural moment where people didn’t think about what came before or what came after.”
History of Art and Architecture Professor Robin Kelsey, who led the Q&A section, said that the new series “brings out all the erotics of the earlier works.... There’s a movement towards a greater life-likeness.”
Avery W. Williamson ’13, a visual and environmental concentrator who attended the lecture, said “these art talks are a great opportunity to get a sense of what’s going on in the art world.”
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