On Innards | Exhibition and Event
Couch, Amanda and Lee, Mindy and Hladky, Andrew (2014) On Innards | Exhibition and Event. [Book art/Artist's book, Curation, Drawing, Exhibition/show, Installation, Other, Painting, Performance, Photography, Printmaking, Sculpture]
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On Innards is a multidisciplinary project developed by artists Amanda Couch, Andrew Hladky and Mindy Lee, that explores the changing conceptualisations of guts and digestion, their impact on the creative process and the role they play in constructing and destabilising our sense of self.
The exhibition at Blyth Gallery, Imperial College London, consists of artwork by Hladky, Lee and Couch exploring intestines, entrails, and the digestive process as material, image, and metaphor. They showed paintings, objects and prints that move between representation and realism, making reference to Gaston Bachelard's claim that digestion 'is the origin of the strongest kind of realism'. Central to the work is the desire to avoid the flattening effects of representation and encourage more embodied ways for people to encounter artwork. We hope to remind our audience of their physical presence in relation to images and language, as well as showing the inner workings of the image and text.
Cutting across media, Amanda Couch's work uses the processes and lived experience of her own body as material and metaphor to create images and objects that are both visceral and narrative. Andrew Hladky is interested in the inner bodily processes of his paintings, revealing the conflict between their surface illusion and the lumpen material that forms them. Mindy Lee serves revived images regurgitated from art history as a smorgasbord of plated paintings and an exorcism of inner and outer states through her repeat prescription drawings.
Accompanying the exhibition Lee, Couch and Hladky led a participatory and experiential day-long event exploring multi-disciplinary perspectives on digestion, innards and the interior body. It brought together researchers and practitioners from the fields of gastroenterology, cultural theory, art history, yoga, performance and fine art and the medical humanities, and participants to share knowledge and experiences. The event was free and open to all.
Recent medical research re-imagines the digestive system as a sensory organ and second brain, the site of our most direct and complex physical exchange with the external world. It has a profound effect on our mood and ability to function, but its reasoning remains largely inaccessible to our awareness. The idea that our guts lurk behind the scenes exerting a decisive influence on our actions is an unsettling one, challenging modern cerebro-centred images of selfhood and agency. This event highlights some of the ways different imaginings of the gut can clash with customary ways of viewing our bodies and ourselves.
• On Innards at the 'Body Horror 2' Conference. Interdisciplinary.net, Athens, 1-3 November 2013.
• Couch, Amanda, Hladky, Andrew, & Lee, Mindy. (2014) 'On Innards’. In: Folio, Jessica. & Luhring, Holly (eds.) Body Horror and Shapeshifting: A Multidisciplinary Exploration. Oxford: Inter-Disciplinary Press. pp. 51-88, ISBN 9781848883062
http://research.uca.ac.uk/2217
• Couch, Amanda, Hladky, Andrew, Lee, Mindy, and Nash, Richard. (2015) On Innards | Publication. Farnham: bookRoom Press
http://research.uca.ac.uk/4309
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