As Jane talks about the joys of working with such theatrical people, she reveals how the project wasn’t without its challenges: ‘I think a lot of the queens were quite nervous. They weren’t keen to come out into the daylight and it was tricky pinning them down to days and times. As I was only there for two week stints, I had to make each trip productive.’ With a successful career in fashion photography, Jane is used to getting the most out of her sitters. Giving the drag queens a clear brief and collaborating with them on their outfits, she shot in the late afternoon sun and gave this dazzling community full exposure.
Taken on film, the portraits present each performer using America’s great landscape as their stage. Jane cleverly uses a backdrop that’s woven into the country's identity and history to say something profound. So often used as a metaphor for the American Dream in literature and the visual arts, particularly Hollywood, here we see the country’s wilderness being used for a progressive, powerful statement that recognises a group giving their era a much needed shake-up. Stood within a great empty desert, a place that highlights the paucity of life, these portraits point to the fragility of society and the subject’s gutsy fight for their place within it.