Candace Hicks
Believing that the stories we tell each other can reveal more
about our values and biases than mundane experience, I mine
genre fictions to uncover the subtle ways that literature reflects
inequalities. My recent project Paper Cuts, a series of paper
craft compositions, offers alternatives to crime-book cover
illustrations. I represent fictional victims as dispassionately as
they are depicted in stories. Though men are much more likely to
die as a result of violence than women, young women remain the
preferred victims in mystery novels. As Edgar Allan Poe famously
said, “The death of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the
most poetical topic in the world.” The spectacle of female death,
evident in the way female bodies are discovered in fiction—usually
on display, sometimes erotically—perpetuates the objectification
of women. Engaging a craft tradition that is still viewed by many
as separate from fine art, I make works entirely of cut paper. I
borrow from the still-life and landscape genres to position my
“paintings” in the history of art.