The National Art School acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora nation, the traditional owners on whose lands, water and skies we meet and share.

Miracle

NFS

oil and acrylic 

18 x 13 cm

Saskia Vander

Saskia Vander

@sass_artss

My body of work explores the uncanny depiction of women in seldom seen moments. I am interested in creating a union of opposites between predictable feminine ideals and violent monstrosity, punctuated by the uncanny. These highly grotesque scenes feature controlling, painful and psychologically uncomfortable human experiences which are contrasted with a smile, a heart, a ‘nonchalantness’ of the women, creating uncertainty for the viewer.

The theoretical framework I draw upon is of theorist Julia Kristeva’s concept of how ‘abject’ and grotesque subjects can be represented. The abject is defined by Kristeva as the body being a primary source of the abject; the abject being a form “nonbeing, neither fully subject nor object”. For example, fluid the body creates (blood) expels for the body that now hovers in this in-between space; being a part of us (subject) and now it exists independently of us (object). In an article by writer Emine Şentürk she states, “The character is trapped within her abject existence … yet finds herself perpetually hindered by the constraints of her social and physical abjection.” This theory extends into my work, placing the female subjects in this in-between state, where the abject and grotesque allow me to explore ways in which women assert their “autonomy through monstrosity”.

View the work: Building 24 Level 2, Ground Floor Gallery