Jen Davis's self-portraits call into question our preoccupation with thinness and ask what it means to represent the self.
Jen Davis is a photographer based in New York City. She's produced a thought-provoking series of self-portraits exploring her insecurities and desires. And because our culture values thinness as beauty and because being overweight is considered deviant, she also raises larger questions about what it means to represent the self.
GOOD: Tell me about what you were thinking when you did this project?
Jen Davis: I started making the work in 2002, when I was an undergrad at Columbia College in Chicago. I was always working with another person and saying those photographs were self-portraits—without me in them. I called them “ambiguous narratives.” I would photograph them in a diner or in their apartment to talk about loneliness and isolation and something that was ambiguous. I wasn’t able to talk about the issue of myself, my body, and societal standards of beauty.
GOOD: What changed?
Davis: I read some old journals about how and where I fit into society—how that contrasted with who I was. I didn’t know who I was. I didn’t have a voice. So I decided it was time for me to turn the camera on myself to talk about the issues I had my body and with food and with how society depicted someone of a larger size.
GOOD: Is there a particular idea that you wanted to convey?
Davis: I didn’t want to become the poster child of this. It was just something I had to do to articulate myself. It was a search for intimacy and acceptance. And it wasn’t something I could do with words. Initially, I was not considering an audience. It was more like a solo project that was being seen and critiqued, but, in that sense, it was therapeutic.
GOOD: What goes into setting up a shot? Why, say, choose a hot dog stand in Chicago?
Davis: That hot dog stand was a place we’d go on weekends and after school. It was just about the light and my body and the process of ordering. The woman in the photo just happened to be there, but it’s contrived. With “Seconds,” I wanted to make a photo that had to do with the ritual of the meal. The light dictated the photo. I came home and saw what the light was doing. The camera is just a witness.
GOOD: Are you feeling conflicted about sitting at the table?
Davis: I titled it “Seconds,” you know. The camera is just gazing on the situation. There’s a sense of removal. I think if there were a man sitting with me, it would have been different. Instead, it’s this woman—a roommate at the time—who’s staring at her plate. I think the intention to deal with food, etiquette, and the subject of eating was something that I had to explore through photography.
Jen Davis is featured in reGeneration 2: tomorrow’s photographers today, currently on view at Aperture Gallery in New York City, and also available as a book.
Ketel Marte was brought to tears during an MLB game after facing a shameful fan taunt.
Baseball manager's poignant support for a player brought to tears after shameful fan taunt
Whether they’re expecting perfection from their favorite players or, worse, behaving callously toward opposing teams, sports fans often forget that athletes are human beings. But athletic competition has the ability to unify and uplift, even amid such painful and unpleasant encounters. Take, for example, a major-league baseball game held June 24, 2025 between the home team Chicago White Sox and visiting Arizona Diamondbacks.
A shameful low point occurred when Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte was at bat in the seventh inning. Per ESPN, a fan reportedly yelled out a comment regarding Marte’s late mother, Elpidia Valdez, who died in a 2017 car accident in the Dominican Republic. Team personnel, including manager Torey Lovullo, then requested the 22-year-old fan be ejected. (Though he was remorseful and admitted his actions were inappropriate, according to an ESPN source, he was nonetheless banned indefinitely from all MLB ballparks.) "We commend the White Sox for taking immediate action in removing the fan," the MLB said in a statement. Marte reportedly declined to comment.
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While the fan’s behavior is inexcusable, it did spark a powerful and inspiring moment. After hearing the comment, Marte was visibly upset, prompting Lovullo to walk on the field, put his arm around him, and offer some words of encouragement. "[I said,] 'I love you, and I’m with you, and we’re all together, and you’re not alone,'" Lovullo said in a post-game interview, as documented by The Rich Eisen Show. "'No matter what happens, no matter what was said or what you’re heard, that guy is an idiot.’"
According to Arizona Republic, Lovullo heard the fan’s comment but didn’t want to repeat it. “I looked right at [Marte] when I heard,” he said. “I looked right at him, and he looked at the person, as well. He put his head down and I could tell it had an immediate impact on him, for sure."
Elsewhere in the post-game interview, the manager called the moment "terrible" and reflected on why he stood up for Marte. "Fans are nasty, and fans go too far sometimes," he said. "I love my players, and I’m gonna protect them…I’ve known Ketel for nine years. He’s had some unbelievably great moments and some hardships as well and some really tough moments in his life. I know those. At the end of the day, we’re human beings, and we have emotions. I saw him hurting, and I wanted to protect him."
- YouTubewww.youtube.com
The following day, the Chicago White Sox X account sent out a message in support of Marte, writing, "We’re with you" and "Baseball is family." On The Rich Eisen Show, the show's host addressed the need to eradicate this kind of toxic athlete-fan interaction: "I was hearing [people saying], 'There’s no place for this in major league baseball.' There isn’t. There’s no place for this in our society. I understand that people are saying the MLB has got to do something about this. Fans have a right to heckle players—this is something that has happened forever…But there is a line."
In another recent, depressing sports moment with a beautiful coda, let’s look to Game 7 of the NBA Finals between the Indiana Pacers and the eventual champions, the Oklahoma City Thunder. During the first quarter, Pacers point guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his right Achilles tendon—a devastating injury that could potentially sideline him for most of the 2025-2026 season. Following the game, in a lovely display of sportsmanship, Thunder point-guard and league MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander went to the Pacers locker room to check on his competitor. In a press conference, he said, "You just hate to see it, in sports in general. But in this moment, my heart dropped for him. I can't imagine playing the biggest game of my life and something like that happening. It’s so unfortunate."
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