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October 17, 2011

The Pepper Spray Girl


So, watch out! Here comes the media hungrily eyeing the non-hierarchical, ego-less Occupy Wall Street movement with the typical aim to individualize, aestheticize, glamorize, romanticize and dole out some notoriety and fame.

Although the movement is clearly distributed across age groups, this first wave of attention and media chic (check out The Stranger and the hot-off-the-press NYMag) is clear focused on the young and (previously) disaffected.

The best example of this elevation, mascot-ization, hero-ization so far is embodied in this photo of, what should we call her, “the pepper spray girl?” (Her real name is Kaylee Dedrick.) According to the backstory at TIME Lightbox, this woman struck photographer Sasha Bezzubov because of the bird (and “the piercing eyes”) even before he and the reporter realized she was the person “seen on YouTube by more than a million people falling screaming to her knees, after a police commander sprayed pepper in her face.” (Bold mine.)

Certainly, it’s an entrancing portrait from Zuccotti Park with the bird and the flag and, yes, the piercing eyes, and an expression seeming to mix hurt, empathy and conviction with a part-witnessing, part-confrontational gaze. There’s no way to know without talking to Kaylee, of course, but I wonder (given the tripod and “the need for some crowd control” to get the picture) if the look would have been quite so piercing if she wasn’t feeling a little a bit singled out, even in need, a bit, of what she was providing the bird.

(photo: Sasha Bezzubov)

  • http://www.serr8d.blogspot.com/ Serr8d

    I’m not going with ‘piercing’ (that descriptor should be reserved for higher-contrasty blue, gray or green eyes IMHO); how about a simple ‘keen’ or ’spirited’ instead? With just a hint of anxiety around the edges, probably exacerbated by the recent ordeal of pepper spray.

    (Enjoyed your seminar Sunday, for the most part; like any web-meeting, it could’ve been distilled by taking 38 minutes off the top…and get a better hosting client, please!  )

    • http://www.bagnewsnotes.com Michael Shaw

      Hey, I’m honored that you were there. Regarding the platform, that was the third, or so, we’ve done on Open-i and we’ve never had that many problems. That was mortifying. On the other hand, I think the discussion was pretty insightful. Williamson was especially good.  Regarding the length, you probably wouldn’t have felt that way without the hiccups. 9 pics, 10 minutes each, it’s worked well in the past.  Anyway, we’re looking hard at the platform issues. We’d like to do “OWS” sometime in the next 6 weeks. Thanks!

  • Nina

    More portraits,  but this time on a grey/blue seamless  (neutral soothing color)   are being shown on the New Yorker site.
    http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2011/10/martin-schoeller-occupy-wall-street.html#commentAnchor_nyr_2000000001405134

  • Anonymous
  • Anonymous

    The ‘trivialization’ of brutality and it’s impact, of the heroism of these protesters, of the ’societal crisis’ that we have yet to come to terms with — all this may transform intolerable circumstance into polite political musings, but I prefer the far harsher reality that so many yet seem afraid of…and perhaps it is what’s seen in Ms. Dedrick’s eyes. 

    Fighting the Medusa is never easy, especially if one encounters so many that have already been turned to stone…and, one might believe Ms. Dedrick is aware that today the Medusa has diffused itself into society, her bond with the bird she carries possibly being the fragile freedom one has from the monster’s gaze, the passive rigidity that comes with it.  But, if so many had not been turned to stone, then perhaps our all too evident societal crisis would not be upon us. 

    While there is much to fear, to me, her gaze says there is yet much more to do!   

  • John Trotter

    RE: The Pepper Spray Girl

    After Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme attempted to assasinate U.S. president Gerald Ford in Sacramento in 1975, Time magazine published a close-up photo of her on the cover, along with the headline: “The Girl Who Almost Killed Ford.” I was pretty young then, but a letter to the editor I read in the next issue has stuck with me all these years since. It asked, if a 26-year-old male had been the subject, would the headline read, “The Boy Who Almost Killed Ford”?

  • John Trotter

    RE: The Pepper Spray Girl

    After Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme attempted to assasinate U.S. president Gerald Ford in Sacramento in 1975, Time magazine published a close-up photo of her on the cover, along with the headline: “The Girl Who Almost Killed Ford.” I was pretty young then, but a letter to the editor I read in the next issue has stuck with me all these years since. It asked, if a 26-year-old male had been the subject, would the headline read, “The Boy Who Almost Killed Ford”?

  • John Trotter

    RE: The Pepper Spray Girl

    After Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme attempted to assasinate U.S. president Gerald Ford in Sacramento in 1975, Time magazine published a close-up photo of her on the cover, along with the headline: “The Girl Who Almost Killed Ford.” I was pretty young then, but a letter to the editor I read in the next issue has stuck with me all these years since. It asked, if a 26-year-old male had been the subject, would the headline read, “The Boy Who Almost Killed Ford”?

  • Chris Fox

    The figure/ground clash between the two (breast-like) circles on Ms. Dedrick’s sweatshirt and the horizontal, black and white stripes hints at a visual subtext that echoes some themes of the protest: life versus regimentation, fecundity versus death.  Other thought: these circles are doubles for her eyes.

    • http://www.bagnewsnotes.com Michael Shaw

      Really glad you went there. I also thought of the “O’s” for Obama.  And then, if the second letter is a C, and stands for Orange County, California, that’d be pretty interesting, too.

    • bresson

      Yes, absolutely.  The way she cradles the bird complements the breast imagery. It’s quite maternal, and if birds could nurse, she’d be holding that one in the right position.  The eyes, the black sweatshirt, the highlighted strands of hair – not your typical mother.  But PS Girl shatters those assumptions, and asserts the necessary truth of a new maternity, one that breaks previously-recognized boundaries, even those that separate species.  Her fight is for the viability not only of middle class American homo sapiens, but of all life on Mother Earth.  And she is unabashedly confrontational about the principal forces that threaten life – the plutocrats whose greed would destroy all life (not just human) as we know it.

  • Anonymous

    Pepper Spray Woman. Please. Thank You.

  • Kaylee

    I don’t post on articles about myself, but i wanted to tell you, It IS indeed “OC” for Orange County, CA. :)

    Kaylee

  • buskertype

    OC is also a chemical abreviation for pepper spray, if I remember correctly.  Oleoresin Capsicum.