LACMA

ShopMembershipMyLACMATickets
LACMA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
info@lacma.org
(323) 857-6000
Sign up to receive emails
Subscribe
© Museum Associates 2025

Museum Hours

Monday

11 am–6 pm

Tuesday

11 am–6 pm

Wednesday

Closed

Thursday

11 am–6 pm

Friday

11 am–8 pm

Saturday

10 am–7 pm

Sunday

10 am–7 pm

 

  • About LACMA
  • Jobs
  • Building LACMA
  • Host An Event
  • Unframed
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Log in to MyLACMA
  • Privacy Policy
© Museum Associates 2025
Collections

Shirin Aliabadi
Miss Hybrid No. 32008/ printed 2023

Not on view
No image
Artist or Maker
Shirin Aliabadi
Iran, 1973-2018
Title
Miss Hybrid No. 3
Date Made
2008/ printed 2023
Medium
Inkjet print
Dimensions
Primary support: 52 5/8 × 43 in. (133.67 × 109.22 cm) Image: 51 1/8 × 41 3/8 in. (129.86 × 105.09 cm)
Credit Line
Purchased with funds provided by the Farhat family in loving memory of Shadi Askari-Farhat
Accession Number
M.2023.15
Classification
Photographs
Collecting Area
Art of the Middle East: Contemporary
Curatorial Notes
By the turn of the twenty-first century, a new generation had emerged in Iran, one no longer burdened by the austerity of the long war with Iraq and comprising an increasingly younger demographic. Surreptitious satellite TV and the internet simultaneously flooded Iran with Western notions and imagery that impacted this youthful cohort. Perhaps nowhere were these transformations more visually conspicuous than in the altered appearance of young women, who pushed the boundaries of the country’s stringent moral and dress codes. And no artist captured this novel young Iranian woman better than the late Shirin Aliabadi. As someone who had lived and was educated outside of Iran, Aliabadi was uniquely positioned to appreciate and document this phenomenon. Staged as studio portraits, her subjects reveal a hybridity, neither of the East nor the West but wholly of Tehran and its evolving urban lifestyle. In her Miss Hybrid series, the models wear colorful headscarves daringly set back to reveal bleached hair, with eyes tinted blue by contact lenses, and their noses sporting surgical tape suggesting recent rhinoplasty. As here, blowing a giant pink bubble with her chewing gum; yet this seemingly innocent conduct, like her dress, is potentially provocative as public behavior.
Selected Bibliography
  • Komaroff, Linda, Stephanie Rouinfar, Sandra Williams, and Sarah Mostafa Ahmed. Women Defining Women in Contemporary Art of the Middle East and Beyond. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2023. https://archive.org/details/women-defining-women (accessed January 12, 2024).