Photographer Feature: Sophie Harris-Taylor
“…with their scars, stretches, bruises and cracks…”
From the Artist:
Slight Wounds channels the paintings of the Renaissance. Their statuesque depictions of bodily perfection in the classical female gods have a simplistic purity as well as a romanticized idealism. They show their subjects as almost inhuman — as mythical immortals.
Stylistically and technically, Slight Wounds recreates this, from composition and form to light and color. However, the women depicted are not Gods. They are, to use the vernacular, “real women,” with their scars, stretches, bruises and cracks, there in detail to be seen by all. The detachment of their heads and faces emphasizes this, removing our capacity for relation or empathy, giving us no option but to scrutinize and find beauty in the body as an object. Somehow this also reveals some essence of their character in a way a portrait would only obscure. This raises them above the human — placing imperfections upon an altar and making gods of the truth.
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