
Alligator
<p>Since the early 1980s, Louise Lawler has photographed works of art installed in auction houses, corporate headquarters, galleries, museums, and private homes in order to demonstrate how an object’s display and contextualization can shape its meaning. The resulting images transcend pure documentation. Her appropriation of works in situ addresses the broader social and economic issues that structure modes of presentation. <a href="https://www.artic.edu/collection?q=silver+guthman&artist_ids=Louise+Lawler&classification_ids=photograph">These early photographs</a>, often displayed as a triptych, deal with the theme of monogramming and, by extension, personal vanity. Depicting a couch with a Lacoste emblem, <em>Alligator</em> draws our attention to the Donald Judd sculpture above it and the reflection of the artist in its surface. <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/187167"><em>Untitled</em></a> shows a Jasper Johns painting, visible through the clear glass of a vitrine that exhibits Robert Rauschenberg’s oddly titled Monogram (1955–59; Moderna Museet, Stockholm). Lastly, <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artworks/187165"><em>Monogram</em></a> depicts Johns’s <em>White Flag</em> (1955; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) hanging over a bed with a duvet lavishly embroidered with the owner’s initials. This sequence shows that Lawler is constantly making connections between various categories of signs, curatorial concerns of private collectors and museums, and the questions raised by redisplaying these pieces as the subject matter of “original” works of art.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1985
- Medium
- Silver dye-bleach print
- Dimensions
- 98.4 × 64.8 cm (39 1/4 × 27 3/4 in.); frame: 104.8 × 65.4 cm (41 1/4 × 25 3/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Louise Lawler
Artist

Photography
American artist Louise Lawler was born in Bronxville, New York, in 1947, and is a prominent member of the Pictures Generation alongside others such as Cindy Sherman and Barbara Kruger. She is also known for her pioneering work in appropriation and conceptual art, as well as institutional critique. Although she has worked in a number of mediums, her career-long use of photography is most well known, specifically her photos of other artist’s work – such as of exhibition installations and pieces in varying stages of storage.
Full artist profile →More
More by Louise Lawler
Wrapping paper for Anger Management pop-up shop, Brooklyn Museum (Unhinged)
2017 · Offset lithograph
Poster for Louise Lawler: WHY PICTURES NOW, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, April 30–July 30, 2017
2017 · Offset lithograph
Wrapping paper for Anger Management pop-up shop, Brooklyn Museum (Unnerved)
2017 · Offset lithograph
Water to Skin
2016 · Chromogenic print
Business card for Metro Pictures, Art Basel, Basel, Switzerland, June 16–21, 2015
2015 · Offset card
Envelope for A Letter Always Arrives at Its Destination, La Panacée, Centre de culture contemporaine, Montpellier, France, July 18–November 16, 2014
2014 · Offset envelope
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Louise Lawler
- Year
- 1985
- Medium
- Silver dye-bleach print
- Dimensions
- 98.4 × 64.8 cm (39 1/4 × 27 3/4 in.); frame: 104.8 × 65.4 cm (41 1/4 × 25 3/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1985-101542
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





