Rebel Girl: Luisa Dörr, Selina Román, and Jo Ann Chaus, presented at the Houston Center for Photography from March 12 through May 24, 2026, brings together the work of three contemporary photographers whose practices examine the evolving meanings of female identity. Through portraiture, performance, and conceptual self-representation, the exhibition highlights the many ways women challenge inherited expectations and reshape cultural narratives surrounding gender, beauty, and autonomy. The project continues the institution’s long-standing commitment to supporting women artists and amplifying voices that have historically received less recognition within the photographic field.
Brazilian photographer Luisa Dörr contributes images from her series
Imilla, which follows a collective of Indigenous women skateboarders in Cochabamba. Wearing traditional pollera skirts while skating through the city’s streets, the group merges ancestral identity with contemporary youth culture. The garments, once imposed during colonial rule and later associated with discrimination, are reclaimed as symbols of pride and resistance. Dörr’s portraits capture moments of confidence and solidarity, presenting the skaters not only as athletes but also as agents of cultural affirmation.
In contrast, photographer Selina Román turns the camera toward her own body in the series
XS. Through tightly framed images and vibrant fabrics, Román transforms familiar parts of the body into abstract compositions of color, curve, and texture. The photographs playfully disrupt conventional ideas of scale and beauty, inviting viewers to reconsider the ways the female form is seen and judged. By combining minimalist compositions with bold visual experimentation, Román creates images that oscillate between intimacy and abstraction.
The exhibition concludes with work by
Jo Ann Chaus, whose ongoing project
Conversations with Myself examines the tension between mid-century ideals of femininity and contemporary understandings of identity. Through staged self-portraits and vintage clothing drawn from personal memory, Chaus reflects on aging, self-perception, and the lingering influence of social expectations. Together, the three artists trace a wide arc of experience, from youthful rebellion to introspective maturity, revealing how photography continues to provide a powerful space for questioning, reimagining, and affirming the many dimensions of womanhood.
Image:
© Luisa Dörr