Laurie Simmons
Walking House
1988-1996
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Laurie Simmons
Walking House
1988-1996
Physical Qualities
Gelatin silver print, Sheet: 2112 x 1197 mm. (83 1/8 x 47 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Given by the Board of Trustees and Staff in Honor of Arnold L. Lehman, Director, 1979-1997
Object Number
1997.130
Though photographer Laurie Simmons never explicitly aligned herself with the feminist movement of the 1970s, much of her work grew out of the period’s changing cultural climate. In the theatrical image Walking House, Simmons attached a toy house to a pair of feminine legs in high heels. Likely a reference to a drawing by Louise Bourgeois, an artist of an older generation celebrated for exploring gender roles through the lens of personal experience, Simmons’s creature represents woman as inseparable from domesticity and her role in the home. At the same time, the photograph recalls lighthearted childhood games of animating everyday objects.
From the artist to Metro Pictures
Dennis P. Weller and Janis Goodman, North Carolina Museum of Art, 'Is Seeing Believing?', Jan. 14-Apr. 1, 2000, cat. 20, p. 54; circulated to The Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens, Jacksonville, Florida.
Kristen Hileman, BMA. "Seeing now: Photography Since 1960," February 20-May 15, 2011.
Gamynne Guillotte and Oliver Shell, Joseph Education Center, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "Imagining Home," October 25, 2015 - April 24, 2016.
Kristen Hileman, BMA. "Seeing now: Photography Since 1960," February 20-May 15, 2011.
Gamynne Guillotte and Oliver Shell, Joseph Education Center, The Baltimore Museum of Art, "Imagining Home," October 25, 2015 - April 24, 2016.