
Getty Museum
Untitled (Old Fashioned), #3
Creator
Jo Ann CallisAmerican Photographer · 1940–present
All works by this person →> Although my work outwardly seems to vary over many years, there are certain links running through all of it. I consistently want to make things that satisfy my sense of beauty. I respond to the tactile nature of things. Another element that pervades it is tension or anxiety. These elements always live within me and are present in all my art. > > --Jo Ann Callis Since she emerged in the late 1970
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 1993
- Medium
- Silver-dye bleach print
- Culture
- American
- Department
- Photographs
- Institution
- Getty Museum
>I chose a shiny moiré fabric in a mauve color. The shine of the material relates to the glazed sugar on the dessert, and the patterned weave adds an element of sharpness and contrast to the softly cushioned fabric. The sugary treat seems to have "weight" because it sits in a gently indented space that looks somewhat flesh-like. > >--Jo Ann Callis This image is one of a series of photographs of dessert pastries--called "Forbidden Pleasures"--occasionally displayed together to invite comparison of shapes, colors, and other visual elements. Callis has said that these soft, sweet, colorful pastries, each lit and staged on a fabric of complimentary texture and design, is about the "idea that desserts and eating desserts carries some of the same psychological baggage as guilt." In other words, eating rich desserts in this health-conscious time can be considered a crime of sorts. In these images, there is also a tongue-in-cheek reference to human sexuality. The seductive ingredients of the pastries and their fabric environments simulate the look of flesh. Although the motivation for this project may have been an impulsive urge to have fun with both the glossy Cibachrome medium and the subject of sweets, Callis was no doubt drawing on the tradition of abundance found in earlier still life painting and the extravagant color of more recent painters representing popular culture.
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