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Heather Dewey-Hagborg & Chelsea Manning

A Becoming Resemblance

Curated by Roddy Schrock

 

August 2 – September 5, 2017

Fridman Gallery is pleased to present A Becoming Resemblance, an exhibition by Heather Dewey-Hagborg and Chelsea E. Manning, investigating emerging technologies of genomic identity construction and our societal moment.

 

In 2015, Heather began to produce 3D printed portraits derived from the DNA extracted from cheek swabs and hair clippings Chelsea mailed out of prison. Incarcerated since her gender transition and subject to a strict policy on visitation, Chelsea’s image was suppressed from 2013 until her release from prison in May this year. The artistic collaboration with Heather gave Chelsea back a form of visibility, a human face she had been denied.

 

As Chelsea described the collaboration: “Prisons try very hard to make us inhuman and unreal by denying our image, and thus our existence, to the rest of the world. Imagery has become a kind of proof of existence. The use of DNA in art provides a cutting edge and a very post-modern—almost ‘post-post-modern’—analysis of thought, identity, and expression. It combines chemistry, biology, information, and our ideas of beauty and identity.”

 

In 2016, with Obama’s presidency coming to a close, Heather and Chelsea teamed up with illustrator Shoili Kanungo to produce Suppressed Images, a graphic short story narrating their collaboration and envisioning a future in which Obama commutes Chelsea’s sentence. The comic book ends with Chelsea visiting an exhibition of her portraits. The first part of the forecast came true just several hours after the comic had been published: Obama commuted Chelsea’s prison sentence and she has now been released. The present exhibition is the realization of the second part of the forecast: for the first time Chelsea will be able to view the portraits produced from her DNA in person. 

 

The centerpiece of the exhibition, suspended at eye-level in the middle of the gallery, is a series of 30 3D printed portraits of possible Chelseas, forming a diverse crowd and evoking the form of a mass movement standing with her. The installation Probably Chelsea illustrates a multitude of ways in which DNA can be interpreted. It is a refutation of outmoded notions of biologically inscribed identity and a testament to the commonality of all, a commonality that is clearly present even at the cellular level. 

 

 

Heather Dewey-Hagborg is an interdisciplinary artist and educator. Her controversial biopolitical art practice includes the project Stranger Visions (2012) in which she created portrait sculptures from analyses of genetic material (hair, cigarette butts, chewed-up gum) collected in public places. Dewey-Hagborg has shown work internationally, including at the World Economic Forum, Shenzhen Urbanism and Architecture Biennale, the New Museum, the Centre Pompidou and MoMA PS1. Her work has been widely discussed in the media, from the New York Times and the BBC to TED and Wired. She is an Assistant Professor of Art and Technology Studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a 2016 Creative Capital award grantee. She is also an artist and resident at Data & Society. 

Heather’s website and Twitter.

 

Chelsea Elizabeth Manning is an interdisciplinary artist and network security expert. In 2015, she collaborated with Heather Dewey-Hagborg on "Radical Love," an homage and exploration of gender identity stereotypes in forensic DNA phenotyping. The installation premiered at the World Economic Forum in 2016, and has since toured in Berlin and New York. The full color life-sized 3d printed portraits of Chelsea Manning were generated from analysis of her DNA, extracted from cheek swabs and hair clippings sent to the artist from Chelsea through the mail. The duo's next creation was Suppressed Images, an online comic book detailing the experience of creating "Radical Love." Chelsea was recently profiled in New York Times Magazine. 

Chelsea's Twitter and Instagram. 

The exhibition has kindly been supported by Shapeways.

Special thanks to Creative Capital, Eyebeam, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts and the New York University's LaGuardia Studio.

 

Images by Paula Abreu Pita. 

Exhibition Catalog 

Download the exhibition catalog featuring essays by Roddy Schrock, Heather Dewey-Hagborg and Dorothy R. Santos

Hard copies are available for purchase in the bookstore.

Press

 

 

What to see at the Seattle Art Fair, from dystopian tech to the outer reaches of the solar system

The Art Newspaper

August 4, 2018 


The Seattle Art Fair features exhibitors from 10 countries

The Seattle Times

August 3, 2018 


Tech Meets Design At This Year's Seattle Art Fair

Departures

August 1, 2018 

Privacy and Visibility: Heather Dewey-Hagborg Interviewed by Amelia Rina

BOMB Magazine

July 5, 2018 

Welcome to the (possible) future: V&A shows tech's hottest ideas

The Guardian

November 23, 2017 

Heather Dewey-Hagborg and Chelsea Manning, Fridman Gallery 

Artforum

November, 2017 

ART: Galleries-Downtown: Heather Dewey-Hagbord and Chelsea E. Manning 

New Yorker

September, 2017 

How Chelsea Manning Covertly Made a High-Tech Art Exhibition While In Prison

W Magazine

August 8, 2017

The Many Faces Made from Chelsea Manning’s DNA

Hyperallergic

August 4, 2017

A Becoming Resemblance: artist creates portraits using Chelsea Manning's DNA

The Guardian

August 3, 2017

 

Artist to debut 3D portraits produced from Chelsea Manning's DNA

Reuters 

July 11, 2017

What Happens When Chelsea Manning’s DNA Becomes An Artist’s Material?Huffington Post

July 6, 2017

Chelsea Manning Is Going to Make an Art World Debut

Creators Project - Vice

July 3, 2017

From Chelsea Manning’s DNA Springs an Art Show

The New York Times

July 1, 2017

Chelsea Manning's collaborative art show is coming to a gallery in NYC

Paper Magazine

June 30, 2017

Chelsea Manning, Artist, Will Show Collaborative Self-Portraits at New York Gallery

ArtNews

June 28, 2017

 

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