Makeup of Tiffany Le , 2010s
Photograph

This portrait shows Tiffany’s professional makeup skills, where she attaches safety pins to her face, nose and painted sharply arched eyebrows and eyeliners. Her makeup evokes a sense of performativity and expressiveness. According to Tiffany, makeup is a crucial part of our daily lives because it communicates so much about a person before one even speaks with others. At the same time, she sees the therapeutic value in doing makeup. She can use it to please herself rather than the outside world. It affords a person the freedom to create different personas. It also deconstructs perceived social, racial, and cultural markers, focusing the viewer’s attention on the colour, shape, and style.

Exhibited by:

Violet Wolfe

Other works by Unknown

"Kagle" mask
150 x 35 cm (h x w)
Wood, metal
The Wanderlust Museum
Mask
150 x 40 cm (h x w)
Wood, cotton, plant fibers, feathers
The Wanderlust Museum
Laundry , N/A
22 x 30 x 5 cm (h x w x d)
etching
Frederick Mulder
John Green and Hannah Hall photographed at the door of Blintarn Cottage , 1890
344.8 x 226 x 3 cm (h x w x d)
Photography
Wordsworth Grasmere
5 MPH Black Lives Matter NYPD Barricade , 2020
Acrylic on Wood
MXD WRLD

More from Violet Wolfe

Banana Dress , 2014
Dress
Violet Wolfe
Pin , 1990s
Jewelry
Violet Wolfe
Wedding Portrait of Rose Lee , 1950s
Photograph
Violet Wolfe
BC Lion’s Newsletter , 1978
Newspaper
Violet Wolfe
Linda at a Fashion Show , 2008
Photograph
Violet Wolfe