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…and kneeling at the edge of the transparent sea I shall shape for myself a new heart from salt and mud
Lucia Farrow, Ariane Hughes, Elsa Rouy and Harley Weir -
Girls are cute and disgusting; hard and soft. Girlhood, at its very core, is rooted in juxtaposition.
…and kneeling at the edge of the transparent sea I shall shape for myself a new heart from salt and mud ¹ is a duo show between Lucia Farrow and Elsa Rouy, in collaboration with Harley Weir and guest artwork by Ariane Hughes. Their bodies and practices are synthesized within a photographic series in which both artists are adorned with their own ceramic and latex pieces. The show is an exploration of tensions; innocence is sexualized, boundaries of the body are transgressed, photographic images take on painterly qualities, as per photographer Weir’s signature style.¹ salt and mud, for short- taken from an Anne Carson poem of the same name -
Bodily fluids are seen expelled onto eyes and faces, legs merge together in bathtubs, held together by latex and ceramic pieces, whose pink and red tones take on fleshy, bloody qualities. These bodies meld into something monstrous, unrecognizable. Yet, at other times, specific body parts are clearly visible; wet hair clings to a naked chest, a nipple appears on the verge of being cut off by a ceramic brassiere. In line with Kristeva’s theory of abjection (see Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror), the images in salt and mud place things where they are not supposed to be, be it limb or liquid, forcing us to confront our own corporeality.
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In many ways, salt and mud is a perverse, twisted look at coming of age, by two artists who, despite already being of age, retain an undeniable air of girlish innocence. This innocence is immediately, promptly sexualized. Farrow and Rouy did not originally seek out to explore notions of girlhood with their work. The show is rooted in their lived experiences as women, as well as close observation of each other’s work, and common use of natural materials to produce wearable items. The prints, as well as Farrow’s ceramic tiles and Rouy and Ariane Hughes’ small paintings are explicit, sexual, and sensual, yet with a sustained innocence breaking through. Above all, salt and mud strives to explore female eroticism, sensuality, obscenity, violence, and subsequent tensions between both physical and emotional cleanliness and dirtiness; notions of the corporeal, and defiance of womankind’s presumed purity, through a young, fresh, female gaze.