Sicko

I worked on the installation, entitled ‘Sicko’, predominantly in the later part of 2021. The piece was staged amidst an abandoned construction site in the heart of London. ‘Sicko’, is a site-specific durational installation, which incorporates body, material, and surrounding. This piece directly engages with personal experiences of health, chronic illness and taboo.

This exploration allowed for a contemplative solo process to form. Starting with large scale paintings which eventually developed into the first half of the durational piece. ‘Sicko’ allows me to engage with curatorial practice within public pace, in the personal and intimate manner which this section of ideas requires. As it deals closely with my experiences of hospitalisation, it felt right to be performing and creating alone.

Hands tearing clay from a bag atop a blue tarpaulin sheet

I have provided the tactile aspects of creating ‘Sicko’, from moulding clay with icy hands, to fashioning garments out of soft storage containers, distorting and upholding twisted limbs. Below are the scribbled designs and fragments of my creative process.

Rubble and rusted rebar

‘Sicko’, being situated within public space, allows me to engage with new audiences. An experience I hope will ignite an awareness of space and architectural personhood within my audience. How are we autonomous? How are we connected? Do you only see a body when it’s crumbling?

A poster for the show Sicko depicting Miel tied into an awkward postion with bandages against a background of paper streaked with black paint

please, objectify me see me for what i'm not i'm the wavering lip i'm the crumbling wall or maybe i'm nothing at all

notes to nobody: Fragments from the installation

“Cotton mouth and linen teeth

Break my back with stitches of a needle

I’m already unravelling

Let me pile in your lap

Spilling like spaghetti

From the mouths of toddlers who’ve lost their mums

I’m the familiar stain on the family sofa

I’m the cracking on the wall ”

“I hate when couples sit

In the front seats

Atop red busses

Don’t you already have enough?

Leave the best seat

In the house

To those to experience it

Alone.”