My recent assemblages combine digital images drawn from popular media culture, art history, and autobiographical sources with a host of materials including paint, resin, glitter, and synthetic hair and fur.

 

Recurring motifs such as heavily mascaraed eyes, glossed lips, hair, and images of the body tap on encoded meanings and myths, conjuring ideas of female fertility, sexuality, and desire, albeit through an often media biased lens. At the same time, materials like glitter and paint alternatively function as acts of adornment or defacement when juxtaposed with photo-based imagery.

 

Whether positioned in the same space or fragmented across multiple panels, these sources inspire a conversation that is as important as their individual material and media born identities. Both, the act of piecing together many views and the fracturing of an image establishes a sense of visual slippage and mutability, calling into question the very idea of the singular, authoratative image. The result are works that I hope capture the ongoing internal negotiation with media fragments and societal constructions of identity and beauty. Ultimately, one might even say, the subject of the work becomes, not the individual images or their juxtaposition, but the act of looking and the constant figuring and problematizing of our relationship to these sources and the continual state of makeover culture they represents.

 

- Alisa Henriquez

Sections

Artist Statement

My recent assemblages combine digital images drawn from popular media culture, art history, and autobiographical sources with a host of materials including paint, resin, glitter, and synthetic hair and fur.

 

Recurring motifs such as heavily mascaraed eyes, glossed lips, hair, and images of the body tap on encoded meanings and myths, conjuring ideas of female fertility, sexuality, and desire, albeit through an often media biased lens. At the same time, materials like glitter and paint alternatively function as acts of adornment or defacement when juxtaposed with photo-based imagery.

 

Whether positioned in the same space or fragmented across multiple panels, these sources inspire a conversation that is as important as their individual material and media born identities. Both, the act of piecing together many views and the fracturing of an image establishes a sense of visual slippage and mutability, calling into question the very idea of the singular, authoratative image. The result are works that I hope capture the ongoing internal negotiation with media fragments and societal constructions of identity and beauty. Ultimately, one might even say, the subject of the work becomes, not the individual images or their juxtaposition, but the act of looking and the constant figuring and problematizing of our relationship to these sources and the continual state of makeover culture they represents.

 

- Alisa Henriquez

Sections