What would it be like to have Meryl Streep play you in a movie? It’s the kind of question most people would only dream about, but for artist Laurie Simmons, it became a reality.
For her debut feature film, The Music of Regret (2006), Simmons expanded on the photographic tableaux she’d been making since her career began in the 1970s, animating her miniature set pieces to create a fully formed narrative.
Using hand puppets and live actors, Simmons told Art21 in an exclusive interview that “in making this movie I did something that I always wanted to do, which is to literally bring my work to life.” In three distinct acts, Simmons uses the puppets to act out complex familial relationships, dance musical numbers, and sing original lyrics written by Simmons.
Streep stood in for Simmons’s female perspective, and there is a comical disconnect between seeing a real-life actor interacting with a series of ventriloquist dummies. The artist explained that although she’d always imbued her work with deeper psychological ideas and stories, she hesitated to include them in her exposition, but her role in directing the film was like “the way the ventriloquist is able to say whatever he or she wants to say through this other character.”
The Music of Regret is one of two films included in a show of Simmons’s work now on view at the Modern Museum of Fort Worth, “Laurie Simmons: Big Camera/Little Camera.” The exhibition traces the artist’s career, from her early black-and-white photography to her most recent hand-painted models as a commentary on perception versus reality.
This is an installment of “Art on Video,” a collaboration between artnet News and Art21 that brings you clips of newsmaking artists. A new season of the nonprofit Art21’s flagship Art in the Twenty-First Century television is available now on PBS. Watch full episodes and learn about the organization’s education programs at Art21.org.