Violet Weiner
BFA 2020
Artist Statement
Our bodily remnants, such as fluids, shed hair, and other refuse, confront the viewer with abjection — what has been physically or psychologically been cast off. The abject reminds us of what we try to forget — our filth, our mortality, the inevitability of the body’s decay. Elements of the uncanny are also included in the abject. In Western culture at least, objects and shapes that elicit these feelings of unease are fairly universal. We have an instinctual, visceral reaction to these forms due to millennia of accumulated cultural knowledge. Even when highly abstracted, visual and tactile features that reference biological suffering such as holes, tumors, and other protrusions provide an immediate psychological connection to physical suffering and the emotions that these symptoms evoke. In my work, I investigate abstracting and transforming elements of the abject through the juxtaposition of objects and materials that have vastly different sociocultural connotations — gemstones and fingernails, precious metals and pubic hair. I have no interest in making work that’s straightforwardly attractive or grotesque. My work confuses these emotional binaries between seduction and repulsion, the desire to touch and the desire to cringe away from an object. Besides visual qualities, tactility in material is vital to the work — how the material warms with body heat, causes static cling, or leaves marks on the skin— and the way in which it impacts the wearer.
Bio
Violet Weiner is a Portland-based interdisciplinary metalsmith who works with a wide range of material, including but not limited to taxidermy, stone, hair, plastic, silicone and precious metals. She is currently working on her BFA in Metalsmithing and Jewelry at the Maine College of Art as well as training under Patricia Daunis-Dunning of Daunis Fine Jewelry. Her current body of work investigates abjection through objects that follow traditional jewelry typeforms, and is inspired by the soft, biomorphic forms of fungi and disembodied organs.