Beyond the Feminine: The Politics of Skin Colour and Gender in Visual Culture
By (Author) Ope Lori
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
7th August 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Human figures depicted in art
Feminism and feminist theory
701.03
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
How can contemporary artists and image makers challenge representations of race and gender in visual culture and produce alternate visions
Exploring a range of lens-based British art that engages with questions of race and gender, this book critiques power structures that embed racial dichotomies to arrive at a nuanced understanding of the position of race in contemporary visual culture. It examines how white and light-skinned Black women are privileged over Black and dark-skinned women in music videos, advertising, and even in classic paintings. Focusing on skin colour as implicit in constructions of femininity, the works discussed deconstruct the links between race and gender to expose hidden power relations.
Presenting intimate interviews with four British artists NT, Marcia Michael, Sadie Lee and Ajamu X along with the authors own artistic practice, this book provides a much-needed toolkit for image-makers and critics alike. Using the analogy of the set up, this boundary-breaking book encourages us to not only question what we see, but to see differently, beyond the conventions of the male gaze. Reversing normative categories and social hierarchies, Beyond the Feminine puts forth a new gaze; an up-set to the system.
Ope Lori holds a post-doctoral Research Fellowship at Transnational Art Identity and Nation Research Centre, University of the Arts London, UK. A former lecturer at Chelsea College of Arts and Leeds Arts University, she is the CEO of Pre-Image Learning And Action (PILAA).