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ACRE Projects Lakeview
Playing and Reality presents new, revisited pieces and actions by Lukaza Branfman-Verissimo, Jerico Domingo, Lariel Joy, Molly O’Connell, and Cristina Victor, developed at ACRE in summer 2018. By way of activism, architecture, storytelling, sculpture, trolling and vexilology, each artist orbits performance as a way to keep notions of collective and individual identities fluid and open.
The title was taken from the eponymous book, a collection of papers and case studies by British psychoanalyst D.W. Winnicott, in which he examines the role of play and transitional objects in an infant’s developing sense of individual subjectivity. A transitional object is any ephemera (often a toy) that allows a child to mediate between, and eventually differentiate their “internal” and “external” realities (inner and outside worlds). Typically, maternal figures steward a child’s sense of self through the gift of a transitional object. By recognizing this object as not-them, but something within a greater world-context, children come to understand their lived experience as subjective and cultivate a sense of agency.
Children typically dis-invest transitional objects of their emotional and mental significance as they mature. But Winnicott suggests that artists, through their work, sustain a child’s “intensity of experience,” that unchallenged distinction between inner and exterior realities. Incidentally, the five exhibiting artists claim these ideas – inner and external realities, maternal figures (maternity and motherlands), the process of investment and disinvestment in an object’s significance – as the rich grounds on which they work. Apart from a necessary levity that play provides, it is no-doubt a subversive act and imperative today, as groups and individuals assess their origin stories, and as realities come increasingly into conflict with one another.