Harriet Zabusky-Zand

Cape Cod; Savannah; Provincetown

Harriet Zabusky-Zand

Cape Cod; Savannah; Provincetown

I love these flamboyant femme fatales. Theirs is an art of illusion. They have created a personal that defies the strictures of biology. In the masks that they wear, these gender illusionists are truly "Painted Ladies."

They personify a hyperbolic commentary on our concepts of feminine beauty and seductiveness -- the perfectly turned brow, long eyelashes, full lustrous lips, well defined cheekbones, glamorous clothes, and lavish jewelry. Their makeup and clothes embody a serious kind of play -- a theater of self in a special kind of performance art.

As in traditional theater, frequently, the tragic and comic mask are juxtaposed. In the introduction to the book 'Persona', Frank Browning says, "Effervescent exuberance and abject desperation or so often intertwined in the drag dream." When we encounter them, we are amused and confounded. Gender ambiguity subverts our codes and expectations of male and female roles. Here, adormant creates a mask, a subterfuge, that underlies and challenges the masks that we all wear.

  • Work
    • Artist
  • Education
    • Masters, Mass College of Art; Diploma, School of Museum of Fine Arts