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Mixed Media Fine Art

'Me Ladies' is a mixed media fine art diptych developed from photographic source material captured during research visits to the Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A), focusing on women’s fashion, period dress, and mannequin displays within historical exhibitions.

Rather than documenting garments as museum artefacts, the photographic process isolates posture, silhouette, fabric structure, and feminine form. These elements are then reworked through digital and mixed media processes to construct new visual narratives that reposition Black female presence within historical aesthetic frameworks from which it has often been absent or marginalised.

The series engages directly with questions of visibility, authorship, and historical accuracy. By grounding the work in museum-held fashion collections, Me Ladies anchors its visual language in verifiable material culture, ensuring that the reimagining of femininity is informed by authentic historical reference rather than speculative reconstruction.

Through repurposing and reframing, the work resists static interpretations of history. The figures emerge not as passive mannequins or frozen ideals but as reanimated presences—reclaiming elegance, complexity, and agency within visual traditions that have rarely centred Black British women.

Classification

Form: Mixed Media Fine Art
Method: Painterly portrait construction using photographic and digital layers
Positioning: Black feminist visual practice, HCCA, cultural reframing

Method & Positioning

This body of work is

  • Concept-led

  • Aesthetically authored

  • Theoretically situated

  • Intentionally mediated across photographic, digital, and mixed media processes

  • Positioned within cultural, historical, and feminist discourse

Sustainability, Ethics & Reuse (Eco/Green Research Practice)

An integral component of Me Ladies is its commitment to sustainable and ethical creative practice. The series repurposes existing photographic material that would otherwise remain unused—images that, if stored indefinitely or discarded, would continue to consume digital storage resources or be lost entirely.

By reactivating these photographs within research-led fine art practice, the work adopts a circular creative methodology, reducing the need for new resource-intensive production while extending the lifespan and value of existing digital material.

This approach aligns with environmentally conscious research practices by:

  • Minimising additional energy use associated with long-term digital storage

  • Reducing waste through creative reuse

  • Treating archival material as an active research resource rather than static data

Within this framework, sustainability is not an add-on but a methodological choice—where reuse, care, and intentionality form part of the ethical foundation of the work.

Together, these principles position 'Me Ladies' within practice-based research, visual anthropology, feminist historiography, and sustainable creative methodologies, where mixed-media fine art serves as a means of historical reframing, cultural continuity, and responsible knowledge production.

SECTION 1

Me Ladies: Duality, Soft Power, and Re-authored Femininity

Me Ladies 01 - Michi Masumi 2025
Me Ladies 03 - Michi Masumi 09052025_edi

Artwork credit:


Michi Masumi 
'The Black British Female Visual Ethnography Exploration Series' 2023-24

Includes: 

'Not Everything that Glitters is Gold' (2023) Photographic art (Photoshop & Lightroom): Honourable Silver Award—London Photography Awards 2023

Category: Student Fine Art Portraiture

© Michi Masumi

SECTION 2

Me Ladies: Duality, Soft Power, and Re-authored Femininity

My photographic series draws on the visual language of cinematic stillness commonly found in early black-and-white cinema and mid-20th-century studio portraiture, where gesture, posture, and pause carry narrative and emotional weight (Barthes, 1980; Mulvey, 2009). In dialogue with the formal restraint associated with photographers such as Irving Penn, the work employs stillness, posture, and controlled framing as acts of presence rather than display.

While Penn’s work is often cited for its controlled environments and sculptural use of the human form, this series reclaims a similar visual grammar to address absence rather than idealisation—using stillness as a means of asserting visibility rather than refinement alone. In this way, the work operates as a form of visual refusal, resisting spectacle and performative legibility (hooks, 1992).

As a Black British child watching BBC2 Saturday matinee films, these visual codes were absorbed in the absence of representation. This series responds to that early spectatorship by recentering Black British female identity within a visual grammar from which it was historically excluded, transforming childhood visual longing into intentional authorship (Campt, 2017).

This series is presented as photo art, using photography as a material practice rather than a purely documentary form. The images are shaped through controlled framing, cinematic stillness, and post-production editing as part of a concept-led and practice-based process, where meaning is produced through both making and reflection (Candy and Edmonds, 2018).

Method & Positioning

This body of work is:

  • Concept-led

  • Aesthetically authored

  • Theoretically situated

  • Intentionally edited

  • Positioned within cultural and historical discourse

 

Together, these principles situate the series within practice-based research, visual anthropology, and Black feminist visual methodologies, where photography operates as a site of cultural knowledge rather than neutral representation.

References:

Barthes, R. (1980) Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography. London: Vintage.

Campt, T. (2017) Listening to Images. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Candy, L. and Edmonds, E. (2018) Practice-Based Research in the Creative Arts. Cham: Springer.

hooks, b. (1992) Black Looks: Race and Representation. Boston: South End Press.

Mulvey, L. (2009) Visual and Other Pleasures. 2nd edn. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

My photographic body of work operates through photographic aesthetics rather than traditional portraiture or documentary photography. The images foreground gesture, styling, adornment, and compositional interruption as critical tools for visual resistance and self-authorship.

Rather than pursuing stillness or classical restraint, my series embraces intentional disruption—using the body as an active site of meaning-making, refusal, and cultural signalling. Gesture functions as language; styling becomes a form of semiotic expression; and the gaze resists closure. These images are not designed to be resolved but to remain deliberately unsettled.

Situated within Human-Centred Creative Anthropology (HCCA) and Black Techno-Cultural Autonomy Studies (BTCAS), this work positions Black British female identity as authored rather than interpreted. The body is treated not as a subject alone but as an archive, interface, and data source, aligning with autoethnographic and visual ethnographic methodologies.

This series also reflects contemporary modes of circulation and visibility. Designed to exist both within research contexts and digital platforms, the images retain conceptual integrity when shared online, acknowledging the realities of visual culture without reducing complexity. In this sense, digital dissemination is not a compromise but an extension of my work’s conceptual framework.

Presented as photographic aesthetics, the practice foregrounds photography as a material and technological process—shaped through composition, performance, and post-production editing—rather than as a neutral recording device. Resistance here is enacted not through opposition alone, but through reframing, excess, and deliberate self-positioning within and against dominant visual codes.

Artwork credit:
Michi Masumi (2024)
'Jay' - Studio & Street Portraiture

 

Method & Positioning

This body of work is

  • Concept-led

  • Aesthetically authored

  • Theoretically situated

  • Intentionally edited

  • Positioned within cultural, digital, and historical discourse

 

These principles sit within practice-based research, human-centered creative anthropology, and Black techno-cultural methodologies, where photographic aesthetics operate as sites of resistance, reframing, self-authorship, and cultural knowledge rather than neutral representation.

References:

  • hooks, b. (1992). Black Looks: Race and Representation. South End Press.

  • Hall, S. (1997). Representation: Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices. Sage.

  • Mercer, K. (1994). Welcome to the Jungle: New Positions in Black Cultural Studies. Routledge.

  • Rose, G. (2016). Visual Methodologies (4th ed.). Sage.

  • Benjamin, R. (2019). Race After Technology. Polity Press.

(Aligning  with HCCA, BTCAS, autoethnography, and digital visual culture)

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