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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Pain to Palette: Artist Transforms Suffering into Art

Pain to Palette: Artist Transforms Suffering into Art

3 Feb

•

Summary

  • Artist uses art to cope with chronic pain and disability.
  • Kinesiology tape remnants become unique decorative elements.
  • Exhibition aims to challenge preconceptions about disabled artists.
Pain to Palette: Artist Transforms Suffering into Art

Daisy Lafarge, an award-winning novelist and poet, has turned to painting as a way to coexist with severe pain and chronic illness. Her latest works, created while enduring excruciating pain and bureaucratic challenges for disability benefits, transform her immediate environment and emotional state into art.

Utilizing affordable materials and repurposing kinesiology tape remnants into decorative elements, Lafarge's art challenges limitations. These watercolors are complemented by a poem cycle inspired by classic texts, allegorically depicting pain as an "intoxicating" lover. The exhibition "We Contain Multitudes" at Dundee Contemporary Arts Centre features her work alongside other disabled artists.

Lafarge hopes this exhibition will foster greater inclusion for disabled artists, emphasizing the need for material change alongside representation. She highlights the systemic issues faced by disabled individuals, including the struggle for adequate support and the prohibitive cost of living.

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The artist believes her work, and disability in general, is not a separate category but an integral part of the human experience, affecting one in four people and implicating everyone. Her art is intended to resonate broadly, irrespective of the viewer's physical abilities.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Daisy Lafarge creates impressionistic paintings and poetry as a way to coexist with and express her experiences of chronic pain and a connective tissue disorder.
Lafarge uses basic materials like paper and paints, and notably repurposes kinesiology tape remnants, which she uses for joint support, into decorative elements in her artwork.
The exhibition aims to showcase the work of disabled artists, challenge preconceptions about disability, and encourage greater inclusion and dialogue about systemic support for disabled individuals.

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