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Using her body as a model, she constructs a number of paper torsos and adorns them with talismans placed over where the heart would be. She fashions these from semi precious found objects, broken watches, gold wire caged jewels and suchlike, and attaches them to the 'skin'. The glistening, semi-opaque paper reflects the body's seeming fragile quality, though in one image she is wearing one of these pieces suggesting they are stronger than they look.
One of the video pieces, called 'Surrender' (2012) documents her experience of open heart surgery. It opens with jerky camera work and vivid scrubs colour suggesting the effects of pre op medication. Then going under, it fades to black and white, focusing inwards on the chest, lungs and breath. The x-ray provides a journey into ones imagined unconscious body, allowing you to experience both the surgical view and be the person being operated on. Fading in and out are glimpses of the actual heart, clouds, and a swimmer fighting to break the surface of a pool. As the tension rises, the body under anaesthetic panics and imagines drowning, finally the release and the swimmer surfaces - and colours return with the patient waking.
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Gordon's fresh, almost clinical response to these rare, insights into the human body take you on an incredible journey. How art and science rely on each other; how mind and body interact; how methods of the medical past inspired the present; connections are made so that we learn and more deeply understand what makes us tick. And that natural stony heart takes on a warmth, beating in the sun.
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