In an airy white blouse, art gallery owner Dasha Zhukova
poses serenely on a chair, in a photograph taken for a Russian fashion website.
The only problem: the chair is fashioned from a contorted lifelike mannequin of
a black woman, sparking an internet outcry and allegations of racism.
It did not help matters that the photograph of Zhukova – a
Russian socialite and the girlfriend of oligarch Roman Abramovich – was
published on Martin Luther King Day, a national holiday in the US.
The photograph accompanied an interview with Zhukova about
her art magazine Garage and was published on the Russian website Buro 24/7, a
project of fellow Moscow "it girl" Miroslava Duma. The picture was
widely condemned by bloggers and internet users, and has since been removed
from Duma's Instagram feed.
Zhukova, however, defended the image in a statement:
"This photograph, which has been published completely out of context, is
of an art work intended specifically as a commentary on gender and racial
politics. I utterly abhor racism, and would like to apologise to anyone who has
been offended by this image."
In the photograph, the mannequin is naked, save for
knee-high boots, elbow-length gloves and black hotpants. She is lying on her
back with her legs crushing her breasts against her body and her head tilted
up, possibly in pain.
The Russian gallery owner, who has become one of the best-known figures on the international art scene, looks calmly at the camera, resting her back against one of the mannequin's upright boots.
The Russian gallery owner, who has become one of the best-known figures on the international art scene, looks calmly at the camera, resting her back against one of the mannequin's upright boots.
The chair echoes a 1969 artwork by British pop artist Allen
Jones and belonging to the Tate gallery in which the mannequin is white.
The website that published the article apologised on Tuesday
for any offence caused.
"Buro 24/7 is categorically opposed to the idea of
racism, oppression or humiliation of people in any form," said a
representative of Buro 24/7, reading from a statement. "We see this chair
purely in an artistic context. We apologise to all our readers who were
offended by these photographs."
The website did not remove the photograph from the article, but
cropped it, so that Zhukova was visible but her mannequin chair was cut out of
the shot.
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