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Dear Dolly

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Dear Dolly

Dear Dolly

For Alice Hawkins second book ā€˜Dear Dolly’, the photographer uses herself to appropriate the imagery and guises employed by country western sensation and American dream, Dolly Parton. As Hawkins states herself ā€˜I have always embraced my fantasies through my photography. Sought the unfashionable, audacious, gaudy and glamorous, and used my work as a guise to experiment with my own identity, because I have dreams of being as brave and ostentatious myself.'

Shot over a 10 year period, the book sees Alice travel the world as Parton ā€œI threw my inspiration into a suitcase, got on a plane and stepped right into themā€. The series also stars a cast of friends, family and Dolly fans who all adorn make-up, costumes, props and prosthetics to manipulate their appearances into Dolly.

ā€˜Dear Dolly’ investigates how Parton dismantles stereotypes surrounding class and female representations through the singer’s music and appearance. As academic, Dr. James Barker argues ā€˜ Parton’s visual persona, is loaded with meaning. The ā€˜country girl’s idea of glam’ represents a class consciousness, taking middle class beauty standards and ideals and subjecting them to a working class lens.’

ā€˜Dear Dolly’ also includes an introduction by Susie Rushton, the Deputy Editor of Telegraph Luxury, and a Contributing Editor to The Gentlewoman and an essay by Dr. James Barker whose work explores LGBTQ+ belonging in country music, using Dolly Parton as his main case study.

$28.00

Original: $80.00

-65%
Dear Dolly—

$80.00

$28.00

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For Alice Hawkins second book ā€˜Dear Dolly’, the photographer uses herself to appropriate the imagery and guises employed by country western sensation and American dream, Dolly Parton. As Hawkins states herself ā€˜I have always embraced my fantasies through my photography. Sought the unfashionable, audacious, gaudy and glamorous, and used my work as a guise to experiment with my own identity, because I have dreams of being as brave and ostentatious myself.'

Shot over a 10 year period, the book sees Alice travel the world as Parton ā€œI threw my inspiration into a suitcase, got on a plane and stepped right into themā€. The series also stars a cast of friends, family and Dolly fans who all adorn make-up, costumes, props and prosthetics to manipulate their appearances into Dolly.

ā€˜Dear Dolly’ investigates how Parton dismantles stereotypes surrounding class and female representations through the singer’s music and appearance. As academic, Dr. James Barker argues ā€˜ Parton’s visual persona, is loaded with meaning. The ā€˜country girl’s idea of glam’ represents a class consciousness, taking middle class beauty standards and ideals and subjecting them to a working class lens.’

ā€˜Dear Dolly’ also includes an introduction by Susie Rushton, the Deputy Editor of Telegraph Luxury, and a Contributing Editor to The Gentlewoman and an essay by Dr. James Barker whose work explores LGBTQ+ belonging in country music, using Dolly Parton as his main case study.

Dear Dolly | Village