This Piece was created for the body of work titled "Body"
Artist Statement: Body
This body of work is an on-going investigation into water as both material and metaphor. Working primarily in torn paper collage, the series engages with the physical and psychological properties of natural bodies of water, foregrounding themes of density, movement, fragmentation, and fluidity.
While rooted in personal experience, particularly time spent immersed in the Indian Ocean, the works seek to move beyond individual narrative. My early-morning swims offered an entry point into a broader contemplation of water’s ‘fluid’ nature. The ocean, in particular, becomes a site of tension and transformation: at once serene and volatile, welcoming and indifferent. It resists static definition and demands continual negotiation.
I have come to see natural bodies of water not as static landscapes but as active participants, bodies in their own right. They rage, they rest, they shift without warning. They strip you down, not just physically but emotionally, revealing what you have tried to suppress. At times they are quiet and enveloping; at others, loud and overwhelming. In their presence, one is asked to surrender control and adapt.
The term body, when used in connection with water, etymologically refers to a cohesive whole, a unified mass or form. It describes a substantial accumulation of water regarded as a single, continuous entity. Yet one cannot ignore the beauty and aptness of its double entendre. It gestures toward a living entity, one that possesses rhythms, moods, and agency. This framing collapses the boundary between human and environment, inviting reflection on how we inhabit, disrupt, and are shaped by these elemental systems. Water becomes both subject and collaborator: its movements informing the logic of composition, and its affective charge embedded in the material gestures of the work.
The works attempt to evoke atmospheric and emotional registers. Each torn fragment, each layered hue, becomes a gesture toward water’s contradictions: its capacity to soothe or unsettle, to reveal or obscure. In engaging with these dynamics, the work reflects on vulnerability, transience, and the limits of control—both in nature and in the creative process.
Ultimately, Body offers a visual and conceptual inquiry into the ocean’s complexity—not as landscape or backdrop, but as a living force that reflects, distorts, and absorbs human presence.
- Collections: Body