
M Holding a Cigarette
<p>For more than 20 years, Yasumasa Morimura has presented himself in the guise of female cultural icons, re-creating their most famous portraits. His photographs do not present a seamless disguise of man as woman, artist as icon, or Japanese as Westerner. Instead, the makeup remains an obvious mask, as it does for female impersonators in Japanese Kabuki theater. Instant color photographs serve Morimura as tests for larger finished works or give him a way to adopt guises he has not pursued elsewhere. Intimate in size and self-developing, these pictures act as a kind of photographic sketchbook that allows the artist to consider adjustments to his costume, stance, pose, gaze, and gesture. <em>M Holding a Cigarette</em> casually reveals the edges of the rolled black backdrop as well as the metal structure supporting it, playfully showing the limits of the facade.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1997
- Dimensions
- Image, approx: 11.3 × 8.5 cm (4 1/2 × 3 3/8 in.); paper, approx: 13 × 10 cm (5 1/8 × 3 15/16 in.); frame: 26.9 × 21.8 × 3.1 cm (10 5/8 × 8 5/8 × 1 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Yasumasa Morimura
Artist

Photography
Yasumasa Morimura is a contemporary Japanese performance and appropriation artist whose work encompasses photography, film, and live performance. He is known for his reinterpretation of recognizable artworks and figures from art history, history, and mass media through his adoption of personas that transcend national, ethnic, gendered, and racial boundaries. Across his photographic and performative series, Morimura's works explore a number of interconnected themes, including: the nature of identity and its ability to undergo change, postcolonialism, authorship, and the Western view of Japan – and Asia, more broadly – as feminine.
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Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Yasumasa Morimura
- Year
- 1997
- Dimensions
- Image, approx: 11.3 × 8.5 cm (4 1/2 × 3 3/8 in.); paper, approx: 13 × 10 cm (5 1/8 × 3 15/16 in.); frame: 26.9 × 21.8 × 3.1 cm (10 5/8 × 8 5/8 × 1 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1997-097683
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified


