Tragedy and assimilation : reciprocity between surface and subject


Autoria(s): Volz, Kirsty; Trevorrow, Elle
Contribuinte(s)

Churchill, Lynn

Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Here we unveil a tragic triptych of three Australian women painfully painted onto the walls of interior surfaces. The woman at the centre of the triptych is Florence Broadhurst whose tragic death still remains a mystery. To the right is Australian skin illustrator Emma Hack who recreates Broadhurst’s wallpapers, mimicking their colourful patterns onto live models. Hack perfectly assimilates the models’ body into the wallpaper, camouflaging bodies except for small hints at something more in the foreground. In the process of Hack’s images, the models become statues, standing painfully still holding their breath for minutes at a time. The third woman, to the left of the triptych, is the fictional character Candy from the 2006 Australian film Candy. Candy’s traumatic struggle with addiction ends with her conveying her pain in a poem she writes on the walls of her home; culminating her tragic story into a disturbed domestic wall surface. This research tries to understand this relationship with the surface through tragedy as a reciprocal agreement between surface and subject and not a permanent transference between one state and another. What the surface provides in times of personal struggle and turmoil is a method for us to come to terms with out material existence.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/60779/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/60779/1/P122.pdf

http://idea-edu.com/symposiums/2012-interior-a-state-of-becoming/2012-symposium-proceedings-full-papers/

Volz, Kirsty & Trevorrow, Elle (2012) Tragedy and assimilation : reciprocity between surface and subject. In Churchill, Lynn (Ed.) 2012 | Interior : A State of Becoming, State Library Perth Cultural Centre and Form Gallery, Perth.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 All Authors

Fonte

School of Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #120106 Interior Design #Wallpaper #Florence Broadhurst #Filmic interiors #Emma Hack
Tipo

Conference Paper