CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- The MIT List Visual Arts Center announced List Projects 24: Sharona Franklin, the Vancouver-based artists first institutional solo presentation. Working with a wide range of media and materials, the artist and disability-justice advocate reinterprets vernacular and domestic craft techniques to make psychedelic, hallucinatory works in textile and ceramic, as well as molded and cast gelatin sculptures that reference biomedicine and pharmacology. With a distinct material sensibility that reveals tensions between the handmade and biotechs industrial-scale production, Franklins works raise complex questions about access, care, and disability in relation to biomedical research and ethics. At the List Center, Franklin debuts an installation of newly commissioned sculptures looking at medical waste, so-called Big Pharma, and the products and byproducts of bioscientific research. Connecting her own extensive research into environmental harm and bioethics with more holistic propositions for remediation and care, Franklins work approaches these themes from a variety of perspectivesincluding her personal relationship to healthcare economies and medical waste formed through her sometimes-alienating interactions with the medical system.
In her performance, New Psychedelia of Industrial Healing (2017-ongoing), photographs, which the artist refers to as bio-shrines, recast Franklins daily act of self-administering injections of an antibody treatment as a ritual performance. The resulting imagesshared by Franklin on social media as performance documentation and incorporated into artworks like Hemichrome Plate and Comfort Studies (both 2020)each feature a syringe containing her daily dose arranged into a still lifelike composition alongside figurines, decorative plates, food, flowers, or other household items. For Mycoplasma Altar (2020), the artist encased fresh and dried flowers, medicinal plants and herbs, prescription pills, personal ephemera, hardware, and medical syringes in an altar of cast gelatin (an animal byproduct frequently used by the pharmaceutical industry). Over time, the wobbling, translucent medium, has slumped and shrunk, partially decomposing with the sculptures other organic componentsan inherent mutability that summons associations with the bodys fragility and inevitable decay.
The installation at the List Center expands on Franklins interest in relating spiritual and ritualistic practices to medical and scientific ones, present in these earlier works. Floor-toceiling curtains, typically employed as temporary, mobile partitions in medical care facilities, wrap the gallerys interior, while found church pews emblazoned with the artists words offer a place for rest and contemplation. Franklins interventions, referencing both institutions transform the exhibition space into a site to hold, in the artists words, a memorial for the biohazardous waste that connects us all.
Within the curtained sanctum, new sculptures focus on Franklins meditations on how life and death cycles mirror those of consumption and waste. A child-sized, biodegradable casket made of willow wicker is glazed with a layer of resinous, hardened gelatin. And instead of a traditional funerary bouquet, the caskets exterior is adorned with detritus from the pharmaceutical industry, including empty gel caps and small pieces of medical equipment, as well as fragments of the artists writing. The works invocations of mortuary rites and decomposition as a process of regeneration stand in stark relief to the methods required for disposing of the biohazardous, industrial waste materials arranged on the caskets surface.
Wish you Well (2022), the exhibitions central sculpture, takes the form of a wishing well, a metaphor for life-sustaining water that, while hopeful, also alludes to contamination. The wells translucent paving stones, made of dehydrated gelatin, encase homeopathic botanicals, fungi, bones and pelts of small animals (some routinely used for biomedical research), medical and biohazardous waste, as well as collages of found text and pharmaceutical advertisements from Franklins personal archive. The work offers an allegory for the cyclical relationship between toxicity and the production and consumption of biohazardous waste by reflecting on how environmental harm from industrial pollution creates conditions for epigenetic changes that can then cause chronic diseasein turn increasing the demand for pharmacological treatments. This pattern, disproportionately affecting low-income and historically marginalized populations, is referred to by the artist as biological poverty. Together, Franklins new body of work unfolds the complexities and contradictions of our dependency on biomedical products and the uneven distribution of their benefits and harms.
Franklins exhibition is organized by Selby Nimrod, Assistant Curator, MIT List Visual Arts Center.