Since she became
first lady of the United States, Michelle Obama has
graced countless number of magazine covers, featuring various fashionable looks
— but her latest cover fashion is making the biggest splash yet.
An unauthorized and altered photo of the first lady, depicted as a slave with
her right breast bared, is the latest cover of a Spanish magazine. The image is
a photoshopped version of a classic French painting and although the gesture
was meant to be a positive nod to Obama's public persona, lots of people just
aren't feeling the "new look."
The image appears
on the August 2012 cover of Spanish magazine Fuera de Serie. A number of sites have
called the cover inappropriate because it depicts the first lady in imagery
closely associated with slavery.
French artist
Marie-Guillemine Benoist completed the "Portrait d'une négresse" by
the year 1800 — six years after the abolition of slavery in France (and two
years before it was partially reinstated by Napoleon Bonaparte). Critics generally regard the
painting as a show of support for feminism and Black rights.
Art historian
James Smalls writes that "the
artist responded to early nineteenth-century French racialism and the
less-than-desirable treatment of women," concluding that "her
painting may be seen as a voice of protest, however small, in the discourse
over human bondage."
The magazine used the photo to run alongside a story about Obama's
popularity and strength in the White House, stating, "Behind every great
man there is a great woman." While the Spaniards may understand their own
message behind the image, it doesn't look like Americans are having it.

No comments:
Post a Comment