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Crickett Fisher was born in Providence, Rhode Island in 2003. Crickett is currently pursuing a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a concentration in printmaking at Rhode Island College. She intends to pursue a Master of Fine Arts.

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Figurative Work Statement

My drawings and prints deal with my own body as a series of objects rearranged into landscapes of bulging flesh and limbs. Hyperreal color is built through layers of pastel marks, gesturing to both the bright, glossy world of the digital and the anal intellectual tradition of figurative art.

 

The female body is one of the most prolific art historical subjects: it is a default object onto which “art” is projected. Most nudes are not portraits, but studies in possession and desire. In its endless erotic depictions, the female body becomes little more than a series of transposable blobs, like the interchangeable breasts and buttocks of surrealist and famous pervert Hans Bellmer’s dolls. In art history and pornography alike, the image of woman transcends a singular body yet remains something less than an individual: a set of symbols, a liminal animal.

 

I work from photos as both model and photographer. The digital age fosters a voracious consumption of one’s own image—the body is rendered still life object, erotic puppet, dissociated from the self by tireless self-scrutiny. Images are in endless supply. It is not necessary to imagine. 

 

I am interested in how images mediate between reality and imagination, as well as the boundary between object and agent. My work explores the beautiful, absurd, erotic, and disturbing possibilities that emerge when bodies are fragmented.

Still Life Work Statement

Techno-baroque is the word I use to describe my still life drawings. “Baroque” because of the density of visual information. “Techno” because of the integration of technologies such as photography and Photoshop into my process, but more so because of the images’ visual electricity. An unnatural glow, hyper-saturated color, and impossible distortions of space mark these works as products of the digital age.

 

In Visions (2022), disembodied doll heads tumble through a void punctuated by flashes of light. Objects are echoed and distorted, veering into abstraction as they become spatially and temporally dislocated. Edges fuse or dissolve into darkness. The environment of the still life becomes a world unto itself.

 

Still life as a genre probes the weirdness of existing as a thing observing other things. I cannot deny allegations of symbolism in these pseudo-figural tableaus. They are riddles as much as they are psychedelic explorations of light and color.

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Photography and editing are an integral part of my process, both as rapid-fire compositional experimentation and a way of distorting space with Photoshop’s blundering hand. But a photo connotes reality—tampered with, but nonetheless physical. A drawing declares itself as artifice. Just as sight is an illusion of biology, simply the brain’s way of interpreting light waves, representational art is a layered illusion. 

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