Who's that girl?
Despite cross-dressing being part of our entertainment since the 16th century (think of the pantomime dame), the drag scene has largely stayed on the periphery until the meteoric success of reality TV show Ru Paul’s Drag Race. Only recently acknowledged by the mainstream, the visual language now associated with this culture is antithetical to Jane’s images. ‘The photos of drag queens we see on Instagram and in magazines are all artificially lit, in vivid colour and are heavily edited in Photoshop. I wanted to turn that portrayal on its head, do the complete opposite. I wanted to show them in a way that you don’t expect.’
Taken on film, the portraits present each performer using America’s great landscape as their stage. Jane cleverly uses a backdrop that’s woven into the country's identity and history to say something profound. So often used as a metaphor for the American Dream in literature and the visual arts, particularly Hollywood, here we see the country’s wilderness being used for a progressive, powerful statement that recognises a group giving their era a much needed shake-up. Stood within a great empty desert, a place that highlights the paucity of life, these portraits point to the fragility of society and the subject’s gutsy fight for their place within it.