Session Notes — Feedback from Franca on Masculinity Exploration
1. Clarity of Exploration
- My exploration is clear overall.
- Franca asked why I am exploring masculinity:
- I realized my final focus shifted to my grandad, but she encouraged me to consider the broader cultural critique:
- I am critiquing how masculinity is portrayed and honoured through power, sternness, and rigidity within the Arab world (however this applies to masculinity in much broader lens).
- These expressions of masculinity can be harmful, especially to women.
2. Maintaining Tension in the Narrative
- Early in my work, I had strong tension in the idea of “bending, not breaking” masculinity.
- Towards the end, Franca felt this tension weakened.
- Martyr posters represent extreme rigidity (the “break”).
- My final outcome could represent the extreme opposite (the “bend”).
- The critical question is: What is the in-between?
- My guiding path should always refer back to the initial concept: How to bend masculinity without breaking it? — this tension keeps the exploration focused.
3. Speculative Research as a Tool
- Speculative research can help maintain and deepen tension in my work.
- Example: Speculating about who is left out or unseen in martyr images — physically, mentally, conceptually.
- Franca referenced a Cold War image from Germany where women appear stiff and smiling but were victims of rape — highlighting the “unseen” stories beneath surface appearances.
- This “unseen” or “left out” aspect could be a powerful direction for exploration.
- Also, considering what is not shown in martyr images — e.g., what the figure is wearing beneath the canvas — could open up new questions and creative avenues.
4. Bringing Back Playfulness and Critique
- I have approached masculinity with a comedic, playful angle before.
- This could return as part of the critique without losing seriousness or tension.
- Think about synonyms for bending masculinity: queering, blurring, folding, twisting.
- These terms suggest nuance and fluidity rather than a binary switch.
5. Grandad as the “In-Between”
- Franca suggested my grandad may represent the “blurred” space.
- He bends masculinity without breaking it — not fully feminine, but not rigidly masculine either.
- Avoid jumping from one binary extreme to the other; instead, explore this in-between space where my grandad exists.
6. Using Visual/Material Metaphors
- The organic patterns from my grandad’s shirt can be a useful metaphor or material for exploration.
- Franca referenced how AI can be used to “make this more feminine” repeatedly to see how far something can be pushed visually — this can be a conceptual experiment even if not using AI directly.
- This kind of iterative visual bending links well to the core theme.
7. Handling Confusion and Staying Grounded
- I expressed feeling confused at times about my direction.
- Franca’s advice: Whenever you feel lost, return to your core operation, in this case: bending — whether that’s bending materials, graphics, ideas, or concepts.
- This core principle can be an anchor to keep my project cohesive and focused.
Summary of Key Concepts to Keep in Mind:
- Bending vs Breaking — Always ask: How do I bend masculinity without breaking it?
- Tension — Maintain it throughout the work, not just at the start or the end.
- In-between / Blur — Explore spaces beyond rigid binaries; my grandad is a perfect embodiment of this.
- Speculative Exploration — Use it to uncover what is hidden or unseen in dominant images and narratives.
- Playfulness & Critique — Humour and lightness can coexist with serious cultural critique.
- Visual Metaphors & Iteration — Use patterns, materiality, and iterative processes as tools to visualize bending.
- Return to the Core — When confused, always return to the idea of bending — it’s my conceptual compass.
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