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Stanford University
Archive Room: Lynn Hershman Leeson
Archive Rooms

Archive Room: Lynn Hershman Leeson

Selections from Special Collections at Stanford Libraries

July 17, 2024–July 6, 2025

Black and white photo of negative film strips depicting artist Lynn Hershman Leeson

Lynn Hershman Leeson (American, born in 1941), Contact sheet from Forming a Sculpture Drama in Manhattan, 1974. Gelatin silver print. Courtesy of Special Collections at Stanford University.

Patricia S. Rebele Gallery (207)

 

A San Francisco-based filmmaker and multimedia artist, Lynn Hershman Leeson is widely recognized for her prescient work in media-based practices and commentary on the relationship between people and technology. This single, small-gallery installation features a selection of videos, photographs, and ephemera related to select projects from the 1970s from the Lynn Hershman Leeson papers to consider the genesis of Hershman Leeson’s career-long exploration of ideas of personhood and identity, as well as her consistent challenge to rethink what and where art can be.

Stanford acquired Hershman Leeson’s archive (Special Collections, M1452) starting in 2004, with additional material arriving in subsequent years.

 

Archive Room: Lynn Hershman Leeson is curated by Maggie Dethloff, Assistant Curator of Photography and New Media.
We gratefully acknowledge support from The Hockwald Fund.

 


 

a black and white photograph

Lynn Hershman Leeson (American, born in 1941), Wax masks and wig in Chelsea Hotel, 1974. Gelatin silver print. Courtesy of Special Collections at Stanford University.


About Archive Rooms

The Cantor’s Archive Rooms—a new, pilot presentation at the museum—highlights the rich art historical resources available right here at Stanford. These small, single-gallery, single-artist installations feature engaging selections from the robust holdings of artist archives at Special Collections at Stanford Libraries and enhance our understanding of the artistic process. The inaugural Archive Rooms installations will feature Lynn Hershman Leeson and Bernice Bing, two individuals deeply influential in the history of art in the Bay Area, United States, and beyond.

 

 


 

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The Cantor Arts Center is located at the intersection of Museum Way and Lomita Drive in the heart of the arts district on the Stanford campus. The Cantor faces the Bing Concert Hall across Palm Drive, northwest of The Oval and the Main Quad.

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