This play is a reflection on the (im)possibility of accepting diversity and the other. The fragmented body of the neoplasm—the fruit of unstable conditions—overcomes barriers, loves and denies itself and others, wanders around, forgetting its profession. It frequently and with pleasure divides, goes through dangerous palpation, questions the possibility of contact with the experience of the other. Poorly brought up but very successful, it invites us to a trans-species transition.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Fusce at elit quis felis ullamcorper vehicula non in est. Maecenas finibus pharetra justo et faucibus. Nulla eu tortor vel ex volutpat efficitur. Vivamus placerat turpis in aliquet venenatis. Quisque ac lacinia mauris. Nam quis lobortis elit. Vestibulum sagittis nisi sit amet euismod hendrerit. Mauris non sodales odio. Donec efficitur molestie quam, sed lobortis massa vestibulum ut.
Nunc at arcu sodales nisi porta euismod non vel neque. Phasellus at lobortis ante, in suscipit justo. Proin non purus vitae nisi molestie consectetur. Vestibulum volutpat lobortis interdum. Vestibulum pretium ligula lorem, egestas ultricies lectus ultricies ac. Curabitur venenatis vulputate dolor.
Julia Cahill graduated from the BFA program at Carnegie Mellon University in the summer of 2012. I was pleased to have a very young artist in the exhibition, as my experience from teaching is that feminist thinking is invigorating and empowering to you women as they discover its relevance to their own lives. Although I say to my students that I'm more concerned that they can articulate their own positions than that they say they are feminists, it is exciting to see that 'aha!' moment, a light turning on, that means they will always from that point forward understand things differently. Cahill had already passed that moment when I met her, and was acknowledging her indebtedness to artworks from the 1970s by American feminist artists. - Hilary Robinson, Curator
Artist Statement
This piece should be viewed as a humorous approach to a very serious subject. And in a way it is not just a piece of art, for me, if anything, that is secondary - I think it is firstly a political action, to not only make other people aware of things but to say "let's think of something, let's think of a way to change this." As an artist a big thing is that you can ask questions, you don't have to answer them, and I'm just posing questions like, "Is this really how we want to keep on viewing women's breasts and how are we going to change that?" So it is leaving it up to the audience to say: "Oh, okay, here's the questions - I can try to answer it." I don't want to give answers because I don't really have many answers, only my own personal ones.
When
2012
Julia Cahill is an artist whose work in performance, video, and installation comments — through exaggeration and satire — on the sexual imagery and exploitation prevalent in media today. She received her BFA from Carnegie Mellon University and has exhibited in the Pittsburgh area.