What Makes Cindy Sherman’s Work So Powerful?
Cindy Sherman’s work is powerful because she makes identity feel constructed, performed, unstable, and strangely empty.
Her photographs often look like portraits, but they are not portraits in the usual sense. They show Sherman transformed into different characters: actresses, housewives, socialites, clowns, historical figures, grotesque bodies, fashion types, aging women, movie clichés, and artificial selves. But the more roles she performs, the less we feel we are getting closer to the “real” Cindy Sherman.
That is the force of the work. Sherman does not use costume to reveal a hidden self. She uses costume to show that much of what we call identity is already made from images, roles, poses, fantasies, stereotypes, and cultural scripts.
Identity as Performance
Sherman’s central problem might be stated this way:
How does the self become constructed through images, roles, costumes, stereotypes, gender expectations, and the viewer’s projections?
That question has generated decades of work.
Sherman is best known for photographic self-portraits in which she depicts herself across many contexts and invented characters. Her breakthrough series, Untitled Film Stills, consists of black-and-white photographs from 1977–1980 in which she stages herself as female types associated with film, mass media, Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house cinema. (Wikipedia)
That series is crucial because the images feel familiar even when they do not come from actual films. They seem like scenes we almost remember.
- A woman stands in a kitchen.
- A woman waits on a road.
- A woman looks off-frame.
- A woman appears vulnerable, glamorous, suspicious, trapped, desirable, anxious, or exposed.
But there is no real movie. The image gives us a role without a story. That is Sherman’s brilliance. She shows how quickly viewers invent identity from visual codes.
The Self as Image
In the Untitled Film Stills, Sherman does not simply dress up as different women. She performs the visual languages through which women have been pictured.
- The office girl.
- The housewife.
- The bombshell.
- The girl on the run.
- The lonely woman.
- The actress.
- The vulnerable woman in a room.
- The woman seen by an implied camera, audience, or gaze.
Sources on the series describe these photographs as staged female roles inspired by 1950s and 1960s Hollywood, film noir, B movies, and European art-house cinema, representing feminine clichés embedded in the cultural imagination. The characters often look away from the camera, which preserves ambiguity and suggests a story outside the frame. (Wikipedia)
That off-frame gaze matters. The woman is not simply posing for us. She appears caught inside a larger story, but we do not know the story. The viewer has to fill in the narrative. We become part of the machinery that produces the character. We project onto her.
That means the work is not only about how women are represented. It is also about how viewers consume representation.
No Stable Original
One of Sherman’s strongest moves is that she appears in nearly all the work, but the work does not feel autobiographical in a simple way.
She is the model, photographer, director, costumer, performer, and subject. But the images do not say, “This is who I am.” They ask, “What makes you think you know who this is?”
This creates a powerful contradiction:
- self-portrait, but not self-revelation
- visibility, but not access
- performance, but no stable performer
- femininity, but as costume
- identity, but as constructed image
- intimacy, but through artifice
- recognizable, but fictional
- familiar, but empty
That is why Sherman is so important for the AI age and image culture. She anticipated a world where the self can be endlessly restyled, filtered, posed, edited, generated, and circulated. A recent review of a Hauser & Wirth exhibition noted that Sherman’s work anticipated social media and the construction of identity for the camera, emphasizing her relevance to contemporary digital self-presentation. (Wallpaper*)
Sherman’s work feels more relevant now because identity has become even more image-mediated.
The Pressure Beneath the Disguise
At first, Sherman’s work can seem playful: costumes, wigs, makeup, scenes, characters. But the pressure is deep. Her work asks:
- Who created these roles?
- Who benefits from them?
- Why do they feel familiar?
- Why do we recognize a person as a type so quickly?
- What happens when femininity becomes a costume?
- What happens when identity is assembled from images?
- What does the viewer want from these characters?
- Where is the person beneath the role?
- Is there a person beneath the role?
That final question is unsettling. Sherman’s work often does not reassure us that there is an authentic, stable self waiting behind the image. Instead, the image keeps producing more images.
A weaker artist might use costume to create fantasy. Sherman uses costume to expose fantasy as a system.
The Viewer’s Role
Sherman’s work strongly implicates the viewer. The viewer looks at a character and immediately starts reading her: innocent, dangerous, pathetic, glamorous, sexual, lonely, ridiculous, powerful, desperate, artificial. But the work makes us aware that we are doing this. We are not neutral.
We bring movie memory, gender expectations, stereotypes, desire, suspicion, pity, class assumptions, fashion codes, and cultural scripts to the image. Sherman’s characters become mirrors for the viewer’s projections.
This is why the images do not need explicit explanation to feel charged. They look like familiar media images, but they do not behave comfortably. They expose the viewer’s habit of turning a person into a type.
A figure can be psychologically charged not because the figure reveals herself, but because the viewer becomes aware of how quickly they construct her.
That connects directly to your interest in the self becoming a public image.
The Body Becomes Less Stable
Sherman’s later work often moves beyond cinematic femininity into grotesque, artificial, aging, monstrous, clownish, wealthy, historical, and digitally manipulated characters. The beauty becomes stranger. The costumes become more excessive. The masks become less seamless.
This matters because Sherman’s problem keeps evolving. If the early work asks how women are constructed by film and visual culture, the later work asks what happens when those constructions become grotesque, aging, decaying, ridiculous, monstrous, or digitally unstable. The performance does not resolve. It mutates.
A 2024 Guardian profile describes Sherman as a trailblazer in portrait photography known for transformations into many personas, with recent work engaging selfie culture and even experiments with AI. (The Guardian)
That is exactly why her practice remains alive. The generative problem keeps absorbing new forms of image culture.
Why the Choices Feel Necessary
Sherman’s choices are necessary because every formal device supports the problem of constructed identity.
- The costume is necessary because identity appears through social codes.
- The makeup is necessary because the face becomes an artificial surface.
- The photography is necessary because the work is about mediated images, not only bodies.
- The staging is necessary because identity appears as role.
- The untitled works are necessary because the image remains ambiguous and unresolved.
- The cinematic framing is necessary because viewers bring movie memory and narrative expectation.
- The self-performance is necessary because Sherman turns herself into both subject and image-machine.
A weaker artist might dress up because transformation is fun or visually interesting. Sherman uses transformation because the self in her work is produced by roles.
What Artists Can Learn from Sherman
The lesson is not to imitate Sherman’s wigs, photographs, cinematic staging, or costume changes.
The lesson is:
Identity becomes powerful as an artistic problem when the image of the self is shown as constructed, unstable, and culturally coded.
This is directly useful for your next phase. Your work already includes stylized women, poses, clothing, travel fantasy, beauty, color, and public-facing imagery. Sherman helps clarify the risk and opportunity.
The risk is making attractive images of attractive personas. The opportunity is to reveal the persona as a construction. A figure can become:
- a tourist self
- a romantic self
- a luxury self
- a social-media self
- a desired self
- a family self
- a public self
- an algorithmic self
- a performed self
- an image-self
The key is not simply to show different looks. The key is to make the viewer feel the role being built.
Closing Insight
Cindy Sherman’s greatness is not that she transforms herself into different characters. It is that she shows how identity itself is manufactured through images, roles, costumes, stereotypes, media memory, and the viewer’s projections. In Sherman’s world, the self does not appear before the image; the self is produced by the image.






