Sophia
Wallace (b. 1978 Seattle, lives Brooklyn) is an American artist
working in conceptual photography and video. Exhibitions
include: KUNSTHALLE
Wien Contemporary
Museum in Vienna, Colgate University’s Clifford Gallery, MiLK
Gallery, TASCHEN Gallery, Aperture Gallery, The Assembly Room in
London, Sasha Wolf Gallery, Kopeikin Gallery, Carnegie Art Museum and
the Australian Centre of Photography among others. Her solo
exhibition 'The
New Masculine '
was at Leslie-Lohman Gallery in Soho, New York November of 2010.
Awards include PDN’s
Curator Award ,
Critic's Pick by the Griffin Museum of Photography, American
Photography AP-25, and ARTslant's Showcase Award. Notable
publications include No
Fashion Please! a
160 page hardcover catalog by KUNSTHALLE wien Museum and Identities
Now ,
a hardcover book of Contemporary portraiture by Peter Hay Halbert
Fine Art. Wallace received her Bachelors degree in Government with a
Minor in African American Studies from Smith College in 2000. She
went on to earn a Master of Arts in Photography from New York
University and The International Center of Photography in 2005.
Wallace often lectures at Universities, Colleges and Photography
Industry events. Presently, Wallace is a 2012 resident in the Art
Law Residency of
Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts.
About
Cliteracy
New
York artist Sophia Wallace wants you — and everyone you
know — to be cliterate.
"It’s
appalling and shocking to think that scientifically, the clitoris was
only discovered in 1998," Wallace told The Huffington Post from
her Brooklyn studio last week. "But really, it may as well have
never been discovered at all because there’s still such ignorance
when it comes to the female body."
The
clitoris, described as the only human body part that exists solely
for pleasure, is not merely a little “button” hidden between a
woman’s legs, but rather a large, mostly internal organ many people
don’t know about, Wallace explains.
In
1998, Australian urologist Helen O’Connell published a paper in
the Journal of Urology describing the sheer scope and size
of the clitoris. She wrote that the unerect clitoris, most of which
is not visible, could be up to 9 centimeters long — longer, as
some have described it, than an unerect penis.
As
Robert King, professor at Ireland’s University College Cork,
explained in a July post on Psychology Today, the true anatomy of the
clitoris had actually appeared in scientific literature as long
ago as the mid-1800s. However, King writes that O’Connell’s
research shed light on the clitoris like no one had before.
Wallace,
citing anecdotal evidence, says ignorance still seems to be
ever-pervasive in modern society.
"It
is a curious dilemma to observe the paradox that on the one hand the
female body is the primary metaphor for sexuality, its use saturates
advertising, art and the mainstream erotic imaginary. Yet, the
clitoris, the true female sexual organ, is virtually invisible,"
Wallace told Creem magazine earlier this year.
"Even
in porn, the clitoris is treated as this optional, kind of freaky,
‘wow he’s doing her this huge favor’ thing," she told
HuffPost, adding that women often feel "embarrassed" to ask
their partners to pleasure them. "It’s insane to me that this
is still happening in 2013."
Last
year, during her tenure in the Art & Law Residency, Wallace
started work on a multi-media project that she hoped would serve to
challenge these misconceptions and to lift the veil on this enduring
ignorance about the female body.
Aptly
entitled “Cliteracy,” the project, which is ongoing, includes
Wallace’s “100 Laws of Cliteracy,” street art about the organ,
as well as a “clit rodeo” that involves an interactive
installment of a giant golden clitoris.
What
is “Cliteracy”?
"I
wanted to talk about female genitals in a way that I felt wasn’t
really being talked about," Wallace said. "For me, this
word ‘cliteracy’ perfectly breaks down the idea of the project.
It’s this pithy, wonderful little word that encapsulates so much so
quickly and so simply. It illuminates this idea of total illiteracy
and incompetence when it comes to the female body."
The
“100 Natural Laws of Cliteracy”
Spanning
10 feet by 13 feet, with a 6-foot neon “Cliteracy” sign suspended
from the ceiling, Wallace’s “100 Natural Laws” installation is,
as she describes it, “monumental in scope and scale.”
"I
wanted to create something so big that it would make everyone,
including a football player or basketball player, feel small next to
it," she said. "You can’t just glance at it and expect to
have gotten it. You have to spend time with it and think about it."
Using
scientific data, historical information, as well as references to
architecture, porn, pop culture and human rights, the “100 Laws”
have been a way for Wallace to lay out her “case for the clit,”
she says.
"I
chose to use the language of Natural Law because its authority
precedes the mandate of states, countries and religious bodies.
Natural laws are inalienable. In much of the world women do not hold
dominion over their own bodies, and even in this country, women are
too often acquiescing to sex acts that do not give them pleasure,"
she told Creem.
One
of the most fascinating of Wallace’s “100 Laws” references the
story of a French doctor named Pierre Foldes who, thanks to
recent research into the anatomy of the clitoris, came up with a
method of repairing the damage caused by female genital mutilation.
By removing scar tissue from the vulva and lowering — and revealing
— a portion of the internal clitoris, he has been able to restore
pleasure to thousands of women who have been circumcised.
Until
recently, Foldes is believed to have been the only doctor in the
world who was carrying out this particular surgery. More doctors have
since adopted his methods.
“When
I returned to France to treat genital mutilation, I was amazed that
they were never tried,” Foldes said, according to a 2011
Museum of Sex blog post on the internal clitoris. “The medical
literature tells us the truth about our contempt for women. For three
centuries, there are thousands of references to penile surgery,
nothing on the clitoris, except for some cancers or dermatology —
and nothing to restore its sensitivity. The very existence of an
organ of pleasure is denied, medically.”
Street
art
To
get people talking about the clitoris, Wallace has been taking to the
streets of New York City, plastering walls with cliteracy-related
posters and slogans.
"This
is an advertising campaign for the clitoris," she said of the
unauthorized street art installations. "After all, who needs an
ad campaign more than the clit?"
"This
work has never meant to be behind the white walls of a gallery. It’s
really about cliteracy becoming a meme and creating new language for
bodies and sexuality," Wallace said, adding that she wants to
soon take her street art project global.
"Clit
Rodeo"
With
the help of sculptor Kenneth Thomas, Wallace created an anatomically
accurate — and rideable — golden clitoris that debuted at the
Wassaic Project Summer Festival in New York, earlier this month. The
giant organ was the star of the “Clit Rodeo,” an interactive
performance that involved members of the public performing and
dancing with the giant clitoris for prizes.
"[It
was] an invitation for audiences to experience a space free from
traditional shame, taboo and silence usually cloaking conversations
around sexuality, particularly female genitals," said Wallace,
who intends on bringing the "Clit Rodeo" to other parts of
the U.S.
"People
couldn’t stop looking at [the clitoris], touching it riding it,
being around it," she added. "It just had this aura about
it. It wasn’t just women on the clit, it wasn’t just the men,
everyone was engaged."
Cliteracy
gear
"If
you see a man walking around with a ‘solid gold clit’ shirt, it
creates this social experiment — what does it mean to have a ‘clit’
on your shirt? It’s just interesting to see these words out in the
world and to see how they operate and how people respond,"
Wallace said of her line of clothing featuring cliteracy slogans.
"It’s
cool to see how much dialogue can be opened up. Ultimately that’s
what the goal is — to open up a conversation," she added.
Wallace
says that her cliteracy project has gone viral since its launch,
triggering a great public response both at physical exhibitions, as
well as online on social media platforms like Tumblr.
"It’s
been a showstopper wherever its been shown. People are hungry to be
able to talk about this," she said. "I’m thrilled that
it’s gone viral and I hope it’ll continue to be shared. I
absolutely want people to talk about it — and really, the effect is
only beginning."
Cliteracy,
says Wallace, is really something that everyone should care about.
Though
the project may seem limited to the discussion about women’s bodies
and female sexuality, Wallace insists that it’s really much, much
bigger than that.
Not
only is the project for everyone (“I love seeing men standing up
for the clit,” Wallace says, adding that this is a conversation
that liberates people of all genders), but she says that the clitoris
can be seen as a “metaphor for freedom, body sovereignty and
citizenship.”
"Cliteracy
is about not having one’s body controlled or legislated," she
said. "Not having access to the pleasure that is your birthright
is a deeply political act."
"To
me, this has always been about a bigger conversation. It’s about
breaking down walls." (
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/28/cliteracy_n_3823983.html
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