ARTIST STATEMENT
In the ’90s, Elaine Showalter revisited the concept of hysteria and called it a protolanguage, communicating through the body messages that could not be verbalized. In my work, I explore this language that comes before any language: what are the silenced symbols and archetypes we carry within us and what do they look like? I attempt to uncover what lies underneath through an intuitive, exploratory process that is chaotic and cathartic. I paint with a gun—a tufting gun—along with needles, hooks, and knots. Repurposing a phallic signifier of violence, I conjure vibrant objects of comfort that inhabit a mystical pictorial space between abstraction and representation. I am interested in the unconscious mind: what lives under the surface. I am attracted by the creature-like, mythological parts of being human. The resulting imagery represents hysteria as a manifestation of the unconscious, ferociously unbound.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Ana Maria Farina was born and raised in Brazil and is now based in the Hudson Valley, New York. She attended Columbia University and SUNY New Paltz for her graduate studies, and in 2018 she was awarded a fellowship to the NYFA Immigrant Artist Mentoring Program. Farina’s work has been featured in many spaces throughout New York such as the SPRING/BREAK Art Fair, the Wassaic Project, the Garrison Art Center, the Dorsky Museum, Paradise Palace, Susan Eley Fine Art, among others. Farina is the 2021 recipient of the College Art Association Fellowship in Visual Arts.
© Ana Maria Farina