It might have Watch An Enticing Invitation Onlinebeen added to the Oxford English Dictionary only in 2013, but the "selfie" has always been an important form of expression in art history.
SEE ALSO: You can now take selfies... with your feet?From Rembrandt to Frida Kahlo, the often-derided self-portrait has had endless creative potential, which has now found its perfect medium in the very mundane smartphone.
An exhibition at London's Saatchi Gallery, entitled "From Selfie to Self-Expression", explores our relationship with the selfie, looking at its history and the differences with the past art masters.
In what is probably a world first, Van Gogh and David Beckham, Picasso and Kim Kardashian coexist in the same gallery space.
While smartphones epitomise the selfie as a form of communication for everyone, Stanley Kubrick and George Harrison were already experimenting with taking pictures of themselves.
Saatchi Gallery Chief Executive Nigel Hurst told Reutersthat modern-day selfies are different because they show "how we would like the world to see us, rather than how we are and who we are."
"It's no coincidence... that most selfies are shot in pretty exotic locations, on holiday when people are experiencing things that are away from their humdrum, mundane lives," he said. "It's not about sharing our humanity, it's about really sharing a version of our identity that we would like people to believe."
Here's a quick roundup of the exhibition's best selfies:
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for March 18, 2025
Belkin 10,000mAh Portable Powerbank: get 50% off at Woot!
Google Pixel 9a video leak reveals plastic build
'Paradise's apocalypse episode is absolutely unforgettable
Amazon Spring Sale 2025: Best deals on cleaning supplies
Could you replace your lawyer with AI?
Best AirPods deal: Save $50 on Apple AirPods Max
Could you replace your lawyer with AI?
Patched Laptops: Testing Meltdown & Spectre Patches on Ultraportable
TikTok's best financial advice
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。