Photo: Loïc Pravaz, courtesy of the artist
Canadian artist Heidi Barkun engages with the subject matter of pain from the perspective of her lived experiences of chronic illness, surgical interventions, infertility, and invisible disability. Although she earned a B.Sc. in anatomy and cell biology before undertaking graduate studies in fine arts, the body is notably absent from her work; nevertheless, it remains central to her investigations. It is, rather, the recurrent motif of suture in her corpus — on textile, canvas, or paper — that evokes the fragility and resilience of the flesh, as it gets punctured, excised, and reassembled in procedures that are meant to recover health, but whose unacknowledged violence all too often results in monstrous or failed reassemblies.
This content is available with a Digital or Premium subscription only. Subscribe to read the full text and access all our Features, Off-Features, Portfolios, and Columns!
Already have a Digital or Premium subscription?
Don’t want to subscribe? Additional content is available with an Esse account. It’s free and no purchase will ever be required. Create an account or log in: