Shannon Derthick
Zsatira Diamond
Sam Eaton
Graham Fee
Anne Feller
Devon Garber
Delaney Gardner-Sweeney
Elisabeth Gordon
Eve Hamilton-Kruger
Heather Hanson
Emma Kluthe
Araceli Lazzari
Dilara Miller
Brandon Montalvo
Collection of Self artist statement: I acknowledge my constant death through the collection of the parts of myself that slough off my body throughout the day. For seven days, I collected all the skin, hair and nail cells that fell from my body using a personal collection method and daily cleaning ritual. Each daily collection of cells is stored in a correspondingly dated manilla envelope.
General Practice Statement: The boundary between public and private is socially and politically maintained through the regulation of behavior. This boundary weaponizes shame and abjection, as tools of a surveillance culture, to silence divergent narratives and maintain dominant social frameworks. My work explores this boundary between private and public, as I question the value of this delineation, and who benefits from its construction. I find thin places where the border between these two spheres is less clearly defined such as a curtain, or a ciphered letter. Thin places demarcate a specific point in physical space that separates the theoretical realms of the intimate and the communal. These veils can draw lines between bedroom and sidewalk, diary and newspaper. They quickly and flexibly remove the possibility of surveillance, making space for deviancy and a reprise from self-policing. These are locations that pique people’s curiosity as forbidden information, the secrets of the intimate, is so easily accessed. With a simple application of force, a cipher can be decoded, a curtain can be pulled aside. By pitting people’s voyeuristic desire to peek into someone else’s intimate information against their expectations of how they are supposed to occupy public space, I point to an invisible, regulatory barrier.