Wangechi
Mutu
Adult Female Sexual Organs
2005, packing tape, fur, collage on found
extremely old medical illustration paper
46 x 31cm |
Wangechi Mutu observes: “Females carry the marks,
language and nuances of their culture more than the male.
Anything that is desired or despised is always placed on
the female body.” Piecing together magazine imagery
with painted surfaces and found materials, Mutu’s
collages explore the split nature of cultural identity,
referencing colonial history, fashion and contemporary African
politics. In Adult Female Sexual Organs, Mutu uses
a Victorian medical diagram as a base: an archetype of biased
anthropology and sexual repression. The head is a caricatured
mask – made of packing tape, its material makes reference
to bandages, migration, and cheap ‘quick-fix’
solutions. Mutu portrays the inner and outer ideals of self
with physical attributes clipped from lifestyle magazines:
the woman’s face being a racial distortion, her mind
occupied by a prototypical white model. Drawing from the
aesthetics of traditional African crafts, Mutu engages in
her own form of story telling; her works document the contemporary
myth-making of endangered cultural heritage.
|