Masks and Mirrors: Concealment and Disclosure in Ralph Eugene Meatyard’s The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater (1969-1972)

Blinder, Caroline. 2026. Masks and Mirrors: Concealment and Disclosure in Ralph Eugene Meatyard’s The Family Album of Lucybelle Crater (1969-1972). Comparative American Studies: An International Journal, ISSN 1477-5700 [Article] (Forthcoming)

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Abstract or Description

This article examines the use of masks in the American photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard’s (1925-1972) posthumously published photo-book The Family Album of LucyBelle Crater (1974). For Meatyard, the spectral feature of photography – to make the invisible visible and vice versa - materializes itself in the use of masks as essential props designed to foreground not only a sense of secrecy and concealment, but also photography’s profoundly unstable ontological status. The use of masks enables an investigation into a form of spectral disorientation that resists the homogenization of time and space within photography, whilst at the same time allowing for a series of intimate portraits of the photographer’s friends and family. While introductions to exhibitions and catalogues on Meatyard have noted the presence of the uncanny in the LucyBelle Crater series, the use of masks in relation to his use of framing and positioning of figures has yet to be examined. By looking at individual photographs, the ontological hyper-awareness of Meatyard’s captions and literary references becomes another way to defamiliarize space and turn it into a fruitful staging ground, allowing Meatyard to render photography as a transformative rather than purely representational act.

Item Type:

Article

Keywords:

Ralph Eugene Meatyard, History of Photography, Art Theory, Spectrality, 20th century American Art, Flannery O’Connor, Ambrose Bierce, Image-Text Studies.

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

English and Comparative Literature

Dates:

DateEvent
2026Accepted

Item ID:

39023

Date Deposited:

17 Jun 2025 09:16

Last Modified:

17 Jun 2025 09:16

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/39023

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