what remains washes away by Nora Tormann is the graduation work from the Department of Performing Arts at Iceland University of the Arts. Bodies are messy, bodies are lustrous, bodies are sensual, bodies are wise, bodies are complex, bodies are in constant change. Bodies fall apart. As ideological emplacements, they fall into aesthetic norms, gendering, and racialization of the flesh. They fall into the chasms of their materiality and the environments they move through. They fall into gaze. And yet, they keep falling out of gaze; subject to their logic they fragment and liquefy their reality and fiction, the inscriptions they carry. what remains washes away started as an exploration of the fluid relationship between a physical ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Helene is a cross-genre text through the lens of...
For my presentation to the forum, Photographic Portraiture Transgressive and Transformative Potent...
My research explores why the abject body is not conceptualised within the idiomof media arts culture...
The Bodies That Remain is a collection of bodies and absences. Through biography, experimental essa...
The poems in Debris (by Kathryn Karoly) consider the female self through the internalized hate manif...
This text is part of the book Remain co-authored with Rebecca Schneider and Ioana Jucan. The text in...
The Body Names Itself is a genre-fluxed intermedia art and writing project, containing verse, prose,...
Based on a series of attempts to capture, focus and preserve memories and what has been lost, A Body...
Nothing Buried Stays Buried is a collection of poems that embraces raw imagery, threads of magical r...
This study focuses on liminal bodies and their delicate transaction with themselves and other people...
This dissertation discusses photographic series by nine contemporary American photographers who pict...
"The Body in the Room: Embodied Poetics and the Traces of Loss" investigates poetic and artistic pra...
"From What Remains posits links between aesthetic and scientific methodologies. Jason de Haan (Calga...
Our bodies are the first of everything. They’re the first thing we encounter, and first space that w...
Together with fellow artist/researchers, Mindy Lee and Andrew Hladky, we presented our new project, ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Helene is a cross-genre text through the lens of...
For my presentation to the forum, Photographic Portraiture Transgressive and Transformative Potent...
My research explores why the abject body is not conceptualised within the idiomof media arts culture...
The Bodies That Remain is a collection of bodies and absences. Through biography, experimental essa...
The poems in Debris (by Kathryn Karoly) consider the female self through the internalized hate manif...
This text is part of the book Remain co-authored with Rebecca Schneider and Ioana Jucan. The text in...
The Body Names Itself is a genre-fluxed intermedia art and writing project, containing verse, prose,...
Based on a series of attempts to capture, focus and preserve memories and what has been lost, A Body...
Nothing Buried Stays Buried is a collection of poems that embraces raw imagery, threads of magical r...
This study focuses on liminal bodies and their delicate transaction with themselves and other people...
This dissertation discusses photographic series by nine contemporary American photographers who pict...
"The Body in the Room: Embodied Poetics and the Traces of Loss" investigates poetic and artistic pra...
"From What Remains posits links between aesthetic and scientific methodologies. Jason de Haan (Calga...
Our bodies are the first of everything. They’re the first thing we encounter, and first space that w...
Together with fellow artist/researchers, Mindy Lee and Andrew Hladky, we presented our new project, ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2016-06Helene is a cross-genre text through the lens of...
For my presentation to the forum, Photographic Portraiture Transgressive and Transformative Potent...
My research explores why the abject body is not conceptualised within the idiomof media arts culture...