"Mapplethorpe’s search for his sexual and artistic identity was conducted with an unsparing urgency across the relatively short span of his creative life. Much of that quest became concentrated in his self-portraits, where he reshaped and interrogated his own visage with increasing self-knowledge." —Carol Squiers
From his earliest self-portrait in the 1960s to his last in 1988, Robert Mapplethorpe’s self-portraits serve as a guiding reference throughout his career, illustrating his evolution as both photographer and subject. In an essay on his self-portraiture, Carol Squiers discusses the fractured nature of his early images as indicative of his difficult journey to identifying as a gay man. As his personal and professional lives developed in tandem throughout the 1970s, so did his self-portraits which began to show him boldly and unapologetically embracing his sexuality.
The present image is one of several he took in 1980. Two years after publishing his X Portfolio of S & M images, this was the year that found him firmly established within the international art world, with solo exhibitions in Amsterdam, Apeldoorn (Netherlands), Boston, Brussels, Chicago, and San Francisco. With his impeccably styled hair and worn leather jacket, Mapplethorpe is cool and confident, even a little defiant. The formal qualities of this perfectly-lit studio portrait had become hallmarks of his work by this stage of his career. Gone is the uncertainty and desire to shock in his earlier work. His demeanor is unshaken by the public reception (and, at times, rejection) of his work and lifestyle. He is a fully formed being, both as photographer and subject; a man at the height of his awakening, oblivious to the impending mortality that will define the self-portraits that follow.