The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Edible 2

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Erno-erik Raitanens Cotton Candy Works, 2011
‘What happened when artist Erno-Erik Raitanen erected a huge wall of pink candy-floss in an art gallery? It disintegrated within days. For the installation ‘Cotton Candy Works,’ the artist hung a huge wall of pink cotton candy which visitors to the art gallery were encouraged to actively pull or eat off the wall. The cycle continues as the candy returns back to its original form once ingested and the gallery is left with a blank wall again.’

 

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Jamie Tan Cake, 2018
‘Her works hardly look edible. Instead, they emulate the textures and appearances of naturally occurring geographical formations – jagged rocks, molten lava and swirle marble. The cakes are designed to “create a conversation between both sedimentary forms and textures,” she says.’

 

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Song Dong Various, 2019
‘For three decades, Song Dong has been at the forefront of Chinese contemporary art. Using a wide range of media, including performance, photography, video, sculpture, installation and calligraphy, his edible work uses a huge variety of food stuffs to explore the intricate connection between life and art, and confronts notions of memory, impermanence, waste, consumerism and the urban environment.’


Usefulness of Uselessness – Varied Window No. 123019


Window Door No. 32019


Same Bed Different Dreams No. 32018

 

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Othman Toma Various, 2014
‘Othman Toma, an artist from Baghdad, Iraq, has put his watercolor skills to the test by painting with a very unusual “paint”- melted ice-cream.’

 

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Anna Królikiewicz Flesh Flavour Frost, 2011
‘In 2011, Polish artist Anna Królikiewicz created Flesh Flavour Frost — ice cream with the smell of human skin. She recalled: “I thought it was tasty, and that people reacted with interest, even enthusiasm, until they read the description. Because afterwards came a strange thought – that you are a little bit of a cannibal, because it’s disgusting, because it’s the taste of skin sweating in the sun.”‘

 

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Dan Cretu Various, 2011 – 2013
‘Romanian artist Dan Cretu uses: fruits, vegetables, sunflower seeds, gelatin, sugars, and even slices of salami into elaborate food art, every aspect of which can be eaten. Dan says, “The challenge is to transform a common object that we don’t notice anymore into something unusual, alive, and appealing.”’

 

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Ivan Day Menon Sugar Sculpture Centrepiece, 2015
‘In 2015 I was commissioned by the Getty Research Institute to produce a replica of a sugar table centrepiece designed by the eighteenth century French cook and confectioner Menon. The designs first appeared in Menon’s illustrated manual on confectionery La Science de Maitre d’Hotel Confiseur (Paris: 1749). My large scale pastillage version was displayed in the seminal exhibition.’

 

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John Cage Edible Drawings, 1990
‘At the end of his life, John Cage created a series of drawings composed from edible plants that were part of his macrobiotic diet. In theory this assemblage could be cooked and eaten. Cage foraged for the plants he used in this series throughout the East Coast, incorporating what was accessible to him and in season. He harvested the vegetation for this work in North Carolina, and the botanical elements incorporate a variety of plants including kudzu, an invasive species known as the “vine that ate the south.”‘

 

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Miralda Eat Art with Miralda, 1973
‘Far from the hypnotic society of spectacle, Miralda offers a participatory form of social behaviour based in the particularity of human interaction and an economics of festive exchange … For Miralda, culture is not isolated within the walls of institutions; it resides in the public domain of shared social rituals, most importantly the meal.’

Watch it here

 

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Yeonju Sung Wearable Food, 2013
‘Korean artist Yeonju Sung that presents a line of edible art by using foods become a fashion series. This kind of wearable food can’t be last long. As time goes by, the food from work do go through a progression of disappearance due to the nature of food and gets gradually changed into the hideous state fading its shape and color in the process.’


Tomato


Egg


Red cabbage

 

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Sharareh Khosravani Warning, 2014
‘The Ohio-based artist has crafted a larger-than-life sculpture that’s shaped like a revolver. But instead of being made from the usual metal material, this gun is comprised of the junk food known as Cheese Puffs. The bright-orange revolver is made up of thousands of tiny puffed-corn pieces that rest on a gallery floor.’

 

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Jana Sterback Bred Bed, 1996
Iron and bread

 

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The Tattooed Bakers AWAY FROM THE FLOCK (After Damien Hirst), 2015
Rainbow vanilla sponge, buttercream, icing, raspberry jelly

Edible Exhibition, May 2015

 

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masharu, SasaHara & Elvira Semmoh The Museum of Edible Earth, 2017
‘If you ever feel like tasting soil from various countries,…there’s an exhibition for you. The ‘Museum of Edible Earth’, which has opened in St. Petersburg, serves guests with samples of earth. Roughly 250 varieties of clay and chalk from all around the globe can be tasted. One of the visitors says she was worried about something happening to her body after tasting soil. “I actually work with food myself, so I am always looking for the earth that I can use to add to food for seasoning. Also, sometimes when I eat it, I can hear the sound of my mother saying “No, don’t do this, it’s bad, it’s dirty, you are going to get sick.” But as she examined and tasted it, she found it became pleasant and easy to enjoy.’

 

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Dieter Roth Gartenzwerg, 1972
‘Due to conservatorial provision, Roth’s work — a Garden gnome encased in chocolate — is not allowed to be moved nor be exposed to any other external man-induced events such as change of temperature or strong light. Otherwise it faces irrepealable decomposition. The work is manoeuvred into a curatorial impasse and hence not removable from it’s momentanous position. Making a photography of “Gartenzwerg” in one take, theoretically would have required four flashes at full capacity. The museum at first insisted on three flashes, in the end agreed to five such. Under inspection of the responsible conservator in the end only four flashes could be made.’

 

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Dinara Kasko Various, 2016 – 2020
‘Experimental Ukrainian pastry chef Dinara Kasko actively works math into her creations, incorporating principles like the Voroni method or utilizing 3D modeling and printing to create different cakes or silicone molds. If the cake shapes are unfamiliar, it might be easier to relate to some of the ingredients she uses like sponge cake, chocolate mousse, berry confit, shortcrust dough, and meringue.’

 

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Mina Cheon Eat Choco·Pie Together, 2018
‘Kindly donated by the Orion Co., 100,000 Choco·Pies will be installed on the floor of Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) Busan for the audience to eat during the entire exhibition duration. The piece calls all North Korean defectors in South Korea to come “Eat Choco·Pie Together.” “Eat Choco·Pie Together”. In December 2017, when the 24-year old North Korean solider “Oh” ran across the DMZ and was shot at, he woke up from his surgery in South Korea and said he wanted to eat Choco·Pie. This reflects how the Choco·Pie has become a unique cultural symbol of liberation and freedom to North Koreans, while being an actual cultural object of loving exchange between the two Koreas. As seen in the famous 2000 film JSA (Joint Security Area), the snack instills the Korean cultural psyche for dreaming and desiring Korean unification, friendship and love. Continued as one of the number one smuggled snacks today, one Choco·Pie is known to be worth three bowls of rice in North Korea. Over many years, Choco·Pies have been sent over the DMZ in helium balloons by the thousands from South to North Korea while the snack is distributed all around the world, demanded by the international market. Each Choco·Pie individual wrapper comes with the Chinese character “Jung 情” (love) and a Korean motto “A New Beginning 새로운 시작.” The artist selected it to symbolize the love and friendship between the Koreas and for the peninsula’s new era of peace and cooperation. As an installation, the piece is dedicated to the North Korean defectors in South Korea. This highly interactive audience participation artwork promises to be a big hit and sensation since Choco·Pie is a very much-loved snack, and the sweet taste and chocolate aroma will accentuate the healing aspect of art, very much needed for our divided Korea.’

 

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Rachel Shimpock Bread bracelets, 2015
‘Rachel Shimpock is a trained metalsmith with a desire to bring the comfort of food and the wistfulness of personal memories into her work. By electroforming and powder-coating actual food – in this case slices of bread – she is able to preserve and embellish it. Bread bracelets is made from bread, electroformed copper, silver, enamel and citrines.’

 

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Zoe Leonard Strange Fruit, 1992 – 1997
Strange Fruit is at once a meditation on loss and a testament to needless suffering from government complacency. Leonard purposefully abstained from a preservation technique, contesting the notion that art should be maintained. The fruit skins—emptied, dried, faded, repaired, ornamented—have the feel of photographs or religious reliquaries. Despite the futility of sewing and adorning of rotting fruit, Leonard’s delicate mending quietly illuminates that the effects of time are as unpredictable as they are inevitable. The discordance between the fruits’ slow decay and the rapid, innumerable deaths from AIDS extends into themes of mourning and memory, absurdity and pain.’

 

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Romina De Novellis Augurii, 2014
‘The work stages the corporal and mental dialogue between a woman, Romina de Novellis, embodying humanity in all of its fragility, and vultures, tautological symbols of predatory behaviour and carnassial drives (that are certainly present in these birds, but perhaps also in humans).’

 

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Peter Anton Chocolate Bunny, 2017
chocolate & mixed media

 

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Daniel Spoerri Various, 1973  1982
‘Daniel Spoerri, the Swiss-Romanian artist’s most celebrated works encapsulate the adventures and pleasures of dining in good company. These are the tableaux pièges (‘snare pictures’) that Spoerri began to make in the 1960s, for which he fixed in place the detritus that was left on a table at the end of a meal: used napkins, empty bottles, dirty plates and coffee cups, overcrowded ashtrays. Spoerri took it up and preserved it, flipping the glued ensemble on its side to hang on the gallery wall: a simple but inspired gesture by which table turned tableau.’

 

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Bruce Nauman Eating My Words, 1966–1967
‘Nauman spreads jam on individual letters cut from bread.’

 

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Nicole Wermers Food In Space, 2012
‘During walks through Rome Nicole Wermers came across the displays of typical artfully made Sicilian sweets. Inspired by their sculptural qualities and levels of abstraction of religious mythology, Wermers designed sculptural sweets that will be shown on a specifically made steel shelf hanging from a wall of the gallery.’

 

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Bob Seng and Lisa Hein Jello Brick Wall, 2014
‘Lisa Hein and Robert s=Seng propose their interpretation of wall in the form of a process-oriented work delivered by means of a cooking demonstration. Usually bricks-and-mortar bring to mind the feeling of permanence, stability and protection, but the Brooklyn-based artists have instead, swapped out the concrete building blocks for something a little bit more wiggly jiggly – moulding colourful slabs of juicy jello in a range of flavours to assemble a partition.’

 

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Sharona Franklin Mycoplasma Altar, 2021
‘Franklin has been producing art works since she was around four years old. As a child, the artist was diagnosed with Still’s disease, which causes severe, painful inflammation of the joints and internal organs. She also contends with endometriosis and two blood disorders, among other physical issues. Through her gelatin sculptures—which she calls “bio-shrines” to her treatments—the artist aims to show that being bed-bound for 90% of her day-to-day life and walking with a cane, when she can, is not a roadblock for creativity. Nor are the medications she takes, or the biotechnological testing she’s been a part of since she was a toddler. Franklin defines her art practice, and this retrospective exhibition at King’s Leap, as “the embodiment of biopharmacology, biocitizenship, and the unveiled autobiography of a daily ritual, private self-injection, and the treatment of genetic disease.” The comforting quilt is meant to represent antibodies that take shape once inside Franklin’s body, while the plates examine “questions of ingestion, mutation, and regeneration.”’

 

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‘David Allen Burns and Austin Young / Fallen Fruit creates beautiful and sumptuous spaces where audiences can enjoy museum collections in new, unexpected ways that simultaneously reveal a series of layered social constructs. This Art project began in Los Angeles by creating maps of public fruit: the fruit trees growing on or over public property. The work of Fallen Fruit includes photographic portraits, experimental documentary videos, and site-specific installation artworks. Using fruit (and public spaces and public archives) as a material for interrogating the familiar, Fallen Fruit investigates interstitial urban spaces, bodies of knowledge, and new forms of citizenship. From protests to proposals for utopian shared spaces, Fallen Fruit’s work aims to reconfigure the relationship of sharing and explore understandings of what is considered both — public and private. From their work, the artists have learned that “fruit” is symbolic and that it can be many things; it’s a subject and an object at the same time it is aesthetic. Much of the work they create is linked to ideas of place and generational knowledge, and it echoes a sense of connectedness with something very primal – our capacity to share the world with others.’

 

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Rebecca Holland Pink Sheets, 2007
cast sugar

 

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Ed Ruscha Chocolate Room, 1970
‘During the 35th edition of the Venice Biennale in 1970, many of the American artists set to display work boycotted the show and withdrew to protest the U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia, including Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Claes Oldenburg and Roy Lichtenstein. Of the 47 artists listed in the catalog for the show highlighting lithographic works, only 24 remained. After much personal debate on whether he would choose to participate, Ruscha asked his mother to send a letter stating her approval of his participation. Due to the space freed up by the withdrawal of so many artists, Ruscha was given space to create something new for the Biennale.

‘At this point in Ruscha’s career, he was producing prints utilizing organic materials like coffee, caviar and — you guessed it — chocolate. After procuring just about every tube of Nestlé chocolate paste he could get his hands on, Ruscha created 360 prints covered in chocolate and hung them on the walls of his room within the American pavilion. The result was sensational, while it lasted. One can imagine that a room covered in sweetness in Italy during the summer would have a short shelf life. Halfway through the Biennale, the original Chocolate Room was attacked by hungry ants. And it wasn’t just the animals that wanted a taste; human visitors, entranced by the smell of the installation and piqued by curiosity, touched, scratched and licked the walls.’

 

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Maurizio Savini Untitled, 2008
‘Two assistants soften the pounds of pink, stretchy bubble gum Italian sculptor Maurizio Savini fashions into gravity-defying businessmen, but—lucky for them—they don’t have to chew it. In Savini’s opinion, bubble gum, “is more versatile material compared to those used by the ‘traditional’ arts, such as painting,” says one of his assistants, Academia di Belle Arti student Riikka Vainio. Her job involves melting bricks of raw gum into malleable sheets (though in the past, the assistant unwrapped and melted hundreds of individual sticks) using a hair dryer-like tool called an industrial phon, which Savini carves with a razor-sharp scalpel.’

 

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Aude Moreau Tapis de Sucre, 2013
‘French artist Aude Moreau has created a carpet that is not only good enough to eat off of, but is actually edible! The sweet furnishing, aptly titled Sugar Carpet (or Tapis de Sucre), is made of over two tons of refined sugar. The delicate floor installation is refined both in terms of its purified components and its elegant resemblance to incredibly ornate with intricately woven patterns customarily found in opulent Persian rugs. The fragile installation responds to footsteps just as one would imagine a pile of sugar to react to movement, which has required attentive maintenance in its construction to make sure that each granule was in place to support its structure at the beginning of its run.’

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** Dominik, Hi!!! There’s this kind of awning on my building that’s near my windows, and pigeons often build their nests there and have their kids who then stumble around there for a few weeks before they can fly, so I spend a weird amount of time watching pigeons basically when I’m smoking at a window, and pigeons are actually kind of complicated to some degree, at least with their kids whom they look after and feed and try to encourage to fly and stuff in a totally recognisable caring parental way, so I guess when they’re not avoiding your feet on the sidewalk looking for scraps they have a somewhat developed social life, or so it seems. Castle of Terror: good pick! Ha ha, it’s true that just changing that one word goofily would make true crime reading a different kind of experience. I’m going to Paris Disneyland today so all love has to do for the time being is make waiting in line to ride the rides last less than a minute whenever I decide to stand in one, G. ** David Ehrenstein, Oh, Randy Newman, yay! Thank you. ** Russ Healy, Hi, Russ. Definitely do whatever it takes to make sure my blog is not a destructive force, especially re: your writing. I’ve never heard of The Gingerbread Castle in Sussex, NJ, and I’m a giant theme park nerd, as you no doubt have surmised, so thank you for the google housed adventure in its direction that I will soon embark upon. ‘Typing’ is very recommended. You’ve probably seen the Ray Johnson documentary ‘How to Draw a Bunny’, but, if you haven’t, do, ‘cos it’s really great. Pleasure to see you, sir. I hope your work goes well. What are you working on? ** Sypha, I just think ‘Cometh Darkness’ is a much more charismatic title. It feels bigger. Keep at it with the publisher search, obviously. Is it not Snuggly-friendly? ** _Black_Acrylic, I don’t know Intergalactic FM, but I’ll give it a spin. Gracias. ** Steve Erickson, Yeah, I knew that JA video well from my teen years but had no idea he directed it. Same with the Godard film of them playing on the roof. You’ve successfully warded me way off that Highsmith doc. I totally agree, the Joe Dante sequence of the ‘Twilight Zone’ movie is easily the best one and really terrific. 7 tracks, not bad, not bad. No, I haven’t read the Gretchen Helker-Martin book. I’ve never heard of it. What is it? Ah, thanks for the fill-in on your thoughts on the elevator scene. Interesting challenge to try to represent something like that in a non-standard way. Zac and I are working on doing that with the ghost in our film. ** T, Hi, T! Yes, reach out once we’re within reach. Oh, awesome about the post. Great, thank you! I don’t know how I do this almost every day either. It’s a hidden talent, hidden from me. Yes, word doc, images attached is primo. Hm, the guttural voice is tempting, but the illness, mm, … well, you never know until you try, I guess. Hopefully I’ll stay well at least until Disneyland closes tonight. I’ll wish you a week wherein everyone you encounter is dressed in a Disney character costume and is endlessly friendly and huggy. ** Robert, Hey, Robert! Welcome back. I’ve been … how have I been … pretty okay in retrospect. If I’ve listened to Melody’s Echo Chamber, I’m blanking out. I’ll go try that new song, thank you. Yes, mixed bag on your job, but it does sound rich. But you need your brain for your stuff, that’s for sure. I used to have this drug dealer, and he was a very good drug dealer on the actual drug front, but I always had to spend a long time hearing about his eternally horrible, violent relationship with his girlfriend before he would fork over the drugs, but it was interesting to be let in there, at least for the first half-hour or so. Anyway … I hope you find equilibrium pronto. ** Okay. Today you get another round of things that you could conceivably eat but can’t. See you tomorrow.

8 Comments

  1. Dominik

    Hi!!

    So many different concepts and ideas involving food. Anna Królikiewicz’s “Flesh Flavour Frost” is pretty sick, and Aude Moreau’s “Tapis de Sucre” is spectacular. But I like so many of these pieces – Daniel Spoerri’s installations, the Cheese Puff gun… Very fun show today! Thank you!

    I don’t think I’ve ever seen a baby pigeon in my life. I always find it so endearing but for some reason also quite heartbreaking when we get to witness animals’ little routines the way you described. I don’t know. Maybe because it makes me realize how vulnerable they are around us. Animals make me emotional, haha.

    Ah, how was Paris Disneyland?

    Love whose goal in life is to become the director of The Museum of Edible Earth, Od.

  2. Bill

    Tasty, tasty stuff today, Dennis. Those math pastries are gorgeous. And I’d totally contribute to the umm transition of the cotton candy piece.

    I had no idea what Bruce Naumann looked like. Last night I saw a CD cover with a cute skinny young guy, and turns out it was Lou Harrison in his youth. Whoa.

    Just came across this, which you might enjoy:
    https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/handmade-italian-amusement-park

    The photos could be better though.

    I just saw Resurrection, the new movie with Rebecca Hall and Tim Roth. Very enjoyable, I think Steve also approves.

    Bill

  3. Sypha

    Dennis, yeah COMETH DARKNESS I guess has a loftier, almost Biblical resonance to it (in fact, I found out that it was Coil parodying the Christian hymn “Out of Darkness Cometh Light”). Snuggly, h’mm, not so sure. The thing is a few of the stories in it have already appeared in Snuggly anthologies, and they’ve become a bit squeamish about sex scenes in books (like they asked me to consider pruning out the sex scenes in HARLEM SMOKE, which I refused to do). My FOURTH collection, PLEASANT TALES III (PT III for short), I would consider sending to them, as that book has like zero sex… I just need for Justin Isis to finish that story we’re co-writing in it (I should add I’ve been waiting now since like June of 2020 ha ha). But aside from that the rest of the collection is done.

  4. _Black_Acrylic

    Would like to see some of these artists on the bill for the Xmas Buche Pageant. I think Dinara Kasko in particular would be in with a chance.

  5. Steve Erickson

    I wish I could take back the mental image of David Ehrenstein’s comment!

    My interview with Roger Shepherd for Trouser Press came out today: https://trouserpress.com/roger-shepherd-and-flying-nun-records/

    The Helker-Martin novel is a gendercide apocalypse horror novel, in which a virus makes all men homicidal zombies and the heroes are two trans women. (She’s cited James Tiptree, Jr.’s story “The Screwfly Solution” as an influence.) The author is trans herself, and it’s one of the few attempts to imagine what “men” and “women” might mean in such a scenario instead of assuming everyone is cis.

  6. Billy

    I had a uni professor who told us about vikings who practised ‘egliseophage’ – they would eat the stone of the church to show pagan dominance over the Christian world, and there was some post war French artist who was doing that too. Sorry to be vague; I forget all the details. I suppose all art is edible if you really set your mind to it. They had Kara Walker at the tate a couple of years ago with a huge sugar sphinx – how that didn’t end up totally inaccessible due to flies I don’t know- does that count as edible or is that being silly? Hope you’re good and glad the fires/floods/war (delete as appropriate) have not yet claimed you.
    Xxx

  7. Russ Healy

    Edible art – very cool! I particularly liked Song Dong because his work with objects has a minimal, geometric quality, as does Diane Kasko’s work – some of her pies/cakes look ceramic. John Cage’s edible drawings were minimal and beautiful. Made me imagine him foraging for his food. It would have been fun to encounter him on a forage. But, the most amusing was “Away from the Flock after Damian Hirst.” Hilarious! I’ll leave it there. Sharona Franklin’s piece was fantastic, as is her story. Still’s disease is an affliction. How she manages to use her art to educate, inspire and cope with her disability over 32 years is incredible.

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