Artist and activist Emma Campbell’s photo series When They Put Out Their Hands Like Scales; Journeys (W.T.P.O.T.H.L.S; Journeys) was photographed in 2012 as she travelled from Belfast, Northern Ireland to abortion clinics in Liverpool, Manchester and London. Campbell created images of the journeys rather than the women who make them because she wanted to avoid “making photographs of victims.”73 Rather than using photography to fetishise the photographed person by reducing her to a single image without context, she establishes what Ariella Azoulay, in her theorisation of photography, conceives as a social relation. Azoulay’s approach to photography has less to do with the photograph itself than with the set of relations within which it is produced and consumed. These are relations between the photographer, the person who is photographed, the location, and a viewer who is summoned to take responsibility for what she sees in the image.74
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Array’s new installation As Others See Us is centred on three fictional characters drawn from the pre-Christian myths and folklore of ancient Ireland, ‘The Sacred Cow’, ‘The Long Shadow’ and ‘The Morrigan’.
Read MoreFor the duration of the festival an exhibition of photographs by Emma Campbell documenting journeys to abortion clinics in Liverpool and London 'When they put their hands out like scales — Journeys' is at Framewerk, 10 Upper Newtownards Road, Belfast, Tues March 8—Sat March 12.
Read MoreI will attempt to show how the history of women’s collectives can be revitalized for current practitioners
Read MoreChoosing Choice: Packing Up Stigma Exhibition features photographic works from ‘Against the Tide’ by Rose Comiskey (Ireland), ‘When They Hold Their Hands Out Like Scales’ by Emma Campbell (Northern Ireland) and digitised print works from ‘Good Women Have Abortions’ by Heather Ault (USA) with curatorial support by Jennette Donnelly.
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