Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Susan Meiselas’s New Girl
Susan Meiselas’s New Girl, 1975 (detail; full image below). Photograph: Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos
Susan Meiselas’s New Girl, 1975 (detail; full image below). Photograph: Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos

Susan Meiselas’s New Girl: exploitation and empowerment

This article is more than 4 years old

The American photographer captures the grim reality and the fantasy associated with carnival strippers

The war zone …

In the late 1970s, Susan Meiselas’s images of civil war and insurrection in Nicaragua and El Salvador established her as one of the great humanitarian photographers. But she had earned her place on Magnum’s books via a rather different series, capturing carnival strippers performing across rural New England.

Long haul …

Rather than street photography’s “hit and run”, Meiselas has always aimed to craft long-term relationships with her subjects. As such, it’s not easy to take these portraits out of context.

From all sides …

Bolstered by interviews, she builds a multifaceted picture of both women and men. Sexism, empathy, empowerment and exploitation are found on both sides of the gender divide.

Keeping it real …

Posed in shabby nylon tassels, this 1975 photo’s subject provides a bitter brew of grim reality and fantasy. That killer look is brilliantly ambiguous: playing the teasing femme fatale yet with a defensive, dead-eyed gaze that speaks of real-world hardship.

Photograph: Susan Meiselas/Magnum Photos

Included in The Body Observed: Magnum Photos, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich, to 30 June

More on this story

More on this story

  • Shakespears Sister: ‘I’ve been trying to mop up grudges, but this was a major one’

  • What a Pratt: how Heidi’s romance with Spencer sparked the end of The Hills

  • A whole new world: does the new Aladdin fetishise Middle Eastern culture?

  • The Other Two: the TV show that asks what if Justin Bieber had two loser siblings?

  • Wish you were here? Why Brexit-era TV is awash with seaside-set shows

  • The 20 best true-crime shows ever

  • What to see this week in the UK

  • Tracks of the week reviewed: Gracey, Ed Sheeran and Justin Bieber

  • This week’s best home entertainment: from What We Do in the Shadows to Gentleman Jack

  • Why do Blondie, the Strokes and Gucci love punk band Surfbort?

Most viewed

Most viewed