SELECTED WORKS BY Pinar YolaƧan
Pinar YolaƧan
Untitled
2002
C-print
106.7 x 82 cm
Pinar YolaƧan presents us with a paradox: the clothed body as (a kind of) nude. In her series Perishables, the artist has outfitted stoic British matrons in animal flesh.
Pinar YolaƧan
Untitled
2003
C-print
101.6 x 82 cm
Each woman has had her garment made expressly to complement her physiognomy. YolaƧan photographs in the manner of a 19th-century anthropologist, though it must be said, however, that her subjects are volunteers unlike the native peoples of the British Empire, āspecimensā who were put before the lens whether they liked it or not.
Pinar YolaƧan
Untitled
2001
C-print
106.7 x 82 cm
YolaƧanās models are fading relics of the British Empire, the distant descendants (the Turkish photographer imagines) of women who were married to the administrators of distant colonies. Now it is they who submit to the scrutiny of the lens. And it is they who now bear the badges of primitiveness.
Pinar YolaƧan
Untitled
2003
C-print
101.6 x 82 cm
Beyond the issues of race and unevenly distributed power, however, there is a more profound question: the confused and contradictory relationship we have with the animal kingdom. Claude LĆ©vi-Strauss famously proposed āthe raw and the cookedā as symbolic equivalents to nature and culture, noting that of all the animal species only humans cook food. But YolaƧan reminds us of a simpler truth: we are what we eat.
Text by William A Ewing