"I'll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I'm really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are"
About this Quote
The subtext is a quiet attack on the idea that photographs reveal truth. Sherman's method starts with a photograph of a “character” and loops back into a new photograph, turning identity into a chain of reproductions. What we read as personality becomes a set of visual cues: how someone holds their mouth, the tilt of the chin, the exhaustion under the eyes. Her “observant” eye isn’t romantic; it’s diagnostic. She’s naming the way society reads people through tiny, policed details and then calls that reading “who they are.”
Context sharpens the intent. Coming out of the late-1970s art world and into a culture saturated with film stills, fashion imagery, and advertising, Sherman makes the street and the screen bleed together. Her characters feel familiar because they’re built from the stereotypes we’ve all been trained to recognize - the secretary, the ingénue, the suburban wife - and then slightly misrecognize. By stressing “subtle things,” she’s admitting the cruelty and power of the visual: we decide a person’s story in a glance, and the camera doesn’t just record that habit. It teaches it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Art |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Guardian: Cindy Sherman: Me, myself and I (Cindy Sherman, 2011)
Evidence:
"I'm good at using my face as a canvas… I'll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I'm really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are.". This wording appears in a published interview with Cindy Sherman by Simon Hattenstone in The Guardian, dated Sat 15 Jan 2011 (01:04 CET). This is a primary-source publication (Sherman speaking in an interview), and it matches the quote you provided essentially verbatim (including the ellipsis after “canvas…”). I did not find evidence (in the sources checked) that the same wording was published earlier than Jan 15, 2011; later reprints/quote-sites appear to derive from this interview. |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Sherman, Cindy. (2026, February 20). I'll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I'm really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ill-see-a-photograph-of-a-character-and-try-to-139158/
Chicago Style
Sherman, Cindy. "I'll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I'm really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ill-see-a-photograph-of-a-character-and-try-to-139158/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I'll see a photograph of a character and try to copy them on to my face. I think I'm really observant, and thinking how a person is put together, seeing them on the street and noticing subtle things about them that make them who they are." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ill-see-a-photograph-of-a-character-and-try-to-139158/. Accessed 24 Feb. 2026.


