The artist's identity-switching performances portend the existence of a culture and society in the United States wherein difference does not divide, dissimilarities are leveled, and distinctions do not necessarily lead to disparity and entrenched hierarchies... Ironically, because Lee's _Projects_ emphasizes how dependent she is on the privilege her intersectional (national, ethnic, gender, racial, and sexual) identity provides, they contradict the very post-racial and postidentity ideology they are said to service. The artist's intersectional identity in combination with her well-defined artistic authority accentuates the continued relevance of identity-positions and the importance of mobilizing action around them. Lee's series, like Piper's, Antin's, and Smith's performances, underscores the power of the artist to control her identifications through her art making - a dynamic that,m in its subversion of persistent identity-based hierarchies, remains remarkable and significant. As is the case with the works of the other artists featured here, **Lee's _Projects_ can be interpreted as supporting the politics of identity, yet it is perhaps more appropriate to understand them as testaments to the slippery ambivalence that defines racialization and identity-making in the United States.**
Smith, Cherise. Enacting Others. Durham: Duke UP, 2011. 231. Print. (emphasis added)
From Nikki S. Lee | Conclusion










