By Bob Tourtellotte
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Fallen pop princess Britney Spears
has been called many things this year as she has bounced in and
out of rehab, attacked paparazzi with an umbrella and shaken
her stuff on MTV's Video Music Awards.
No doubt, Spears has been a real piece of work. Now, she is
more than 50 pieces of art at a Hollywood gallery.
Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbatos -- makers of the
documentary "The Eyes of Tammy Faye" about former televangelist
Tammy Faye Bakker Messner as well as other films exploring fame
-- gathered paintings, sculpture and other work for "Just
Britney," which opened at their gallery on Friday.
"We reached out to a number of artists and found Britney is
such a polarizing character these days," said Steven Corfe, a
co-curator of the show with Thairin Smothers.
"People absolutely adored her and wanted to celebrate her
bubblegum, pop princess years. Or, they thought she was an
irresponsible mother or wanted to play up the drug side of
things," Corfe added. "The show reflects that whole spectrum."
Pieces range from a portrait of the 25-year-old singer,
"Gum Blond XLVIII" by Jason Kronenwald, made of chewed bubble
gum, to the 6-foot by 10-foot (1.8 by 3.0-metre) "Snake
Charmer" by Jamie Boling, based on a paparazzi photo of Britney
exiting a car with her skirt hiked up and no panties on.
Spears rose to fame as a child star on the Disney Channel
and a member of the New Mickey Mouse Club. As a teenager, she
released chart-topping pop tunes like "Baby One More Time" and
"Oops!...I Did It Again."
But as a young adult, Spears has been through two marriages
and is in a custody battle over the two children she had with
ex-husband Kevin Federline.
She has dealt with substance abuse, fired her staff, shaved
her head and shed clothes for an ocean dip in front of
paparazzi. Her performance of a new song, "Gimme More," while
dressed as a stripper at the MTV awards, earned harsh
criticism.
"She personifies our obsession with celebrity culture, and
it's an obsession that won't die down no matter how far she
goes off the rail," Corfe said. "We love to put people up on a
pillar and we love even more to shoot them down."
"Just Britney" runs through early October at Bailey's and
Barbatos' World of Wonder art gallery in Hollywood.