Carrie Becker
Carrie M. Becker is a contemporary photographer. She is best known for her 2011 body of work, “Barbie Trashes Her Dreamhouse,” a viral collection of images that imagined the titular hero as a hoarder. Following her undergraduate work, Becker spent seven years learning commercial photography in Chicago. After moving to Kansas for graduate school, she earned a Master of Fine Arts in sculpture. Firstly working as textile installation artist, Becker won a residency to the prestigious McColl Center for Visual Art in Charlotte, N.C., where she expanded her plastic and nylon installations, “Emergent Structures.”
In 2010, she returned home to St. Louis. Deciding to combine her studio lighting and three-dimensional design backgrounds, she began hand-building and photographing 1/6th scale dioramas. To create these trompe l’oeils, materials such as craft sticks, coffee stirrers, foam board were used, and the scenes were photographed at low angles. “Collyer’s Dollhouse” and “Lilliputian Entropy” followed, depicting the interiors of both simple and lavish abandoned homes.
Becker’s teaching experience includes photography and design classes at Forest Park and Lewis & Clark community colleges. She is represented by the Shearburn Gallery, and her work as been featured in TIME, Huffpost, and BUST, as well as on PBS and KSDK.