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Anna Perach Brings Monstrous Women to Life in Tufted Textiles

In E.T.A. Hoffmann’s short story “The Sandman” (1817), a gothic tale of psychological unraveling, a young man called Nathaniel is haunted by visions of a nightmarish character who steals children’s eyes. Nathaniel, believing the Sandman has murdered his father, becomes unable to distinguish fantasy from reality, eventually falling in love with a mechanical doll named Olympia. When he sees Olympia torn apart by her creators, her eyes strewn on the ground, he has a complete breakdown.

For Anna Perach, an artist whose work explores how myths and other cultural narratives shape our ideas about ourselves, reading “The Sandman” felt like rifling through a treasure trove of material. She was especially fascinated by Olympia, interpreting her as a symbol of the often-repressed “monstrous feminine”—the chaotic and irrational aspects of the self that have been rigorously controlled and denied in patriarchal societies. “Storytelling is my main interest,” the Ukraine-born artist told me during a recent visit to her studio at Gasworks in South London, where she had her first institutional exhibition last year. “I identify as a woman, and I often work with women, so the themes and content I am drawn to tend to be related to that experience.”

Since graduating in 2020 with an MFA from Goldsmiths in London, Perach has speedily built an impressive resumé with group and solo shows at galleries including Edel Assanti in London and ADA in Rome. Her research-heavy projects have taken on subjects such as the Victorian side-show fixture of “spidora” (half-spider, half-woman) and 18th-century female wax cadavers known as “anatomical Venuses.” Perach riffs on these sources, often by creating most “wearable sculpture”: colorful life-sized figures, heads, and bodily appendages made from a textile called tufted yarn. Several of these are on view through June 24th in “A Leap of Sympathy” at Richard Saltoun in London (the show will later travel to the non-profit East Gallery in Norwich). The sculptures can be displayed statically in the gallery or activated through performance—an idea that Perach thinks may be rooted in her brief post-BA studies in classical theater and acting.

Initially, Perach was intimidated by how extensively “The Sandman” had already been explored by others, not least Sigmund Freud, who used the story as a key reference in his famous essay on The Uncanny. Then she came across Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori’s 1970 essay, “The Uncanny Valley,” which describes how we switch from empathy to revulsion when we encounter robots that look almost human, but not quite. This fascinated Perach, who has long been preoccupied with psychology—she has a diploma in art therapy and counselling and still maintains a therapeutic practice. Her current show’s title is borrowed from philosopher Henri Bergson, who argued that it was through a leap of intuition or “sympathy,” rather than empirical knowledge, that we apprehend other people’s humanity. What is reality, anyway?

Olimpia, 2025
Anna Perach

Richard Saltoun

Central to the exhibition is Olimpia (2025), a work comprising two matching wearable sculptures: female figures in flouncy Rococo-inspired dresses. Tufting, a technique which Perach first came across at Goldsmiths, is more often used in carpet-making than dress-making. But Perach was attracted to it, she said, because it reminded her of the “Soviet-inspired home,” lined with carpets on the walls and floors, where she grew up. She was also interested in the textile’s associations with feminine-coded domesticity, and the notion of “sweeping things under the rug”—in other words, repression.

The paired sculptures could be interpreted as representing Nathaniel’s two love interests in “The Sandman”: Olympia and Clara, his fiancée since childhood. The latter is presented as a paragon of Enlightenment-era rationality, cheerfully and unremittingly sane in her continued assurances to Nathaniel that his fears are all in his mind. “The dichotomy between rationality and intuition, the mind and the body, is a link in a lot of my work,” Perach said. For the exhibition, she worked with a team of recurring collaborators—including choreographer Luigo Ambrosio and composer Laima Leyton—to develop a performance in which the two figures engage in a kind of pas de deux. One of the bodies is worn by a live performer, Maria Sole Montaci, while the other is animated using robotics.

A Leap of Sympathy, 2025
Anna Perach

Richard Saltoun

Spinning further away from the source material, the show also features a series of haunting watercolor assemblages that reimagine Olympia’s plot, casting her as a pair of twins separated in childhood. Perach described the images as “a visualization of the process of repression in which the self is split into two parts.” (Perhaps, then, the two tufted figures are both also Olympia—the viewer is left to decide.) A series of tufted heads mounted on wooden poles, collectively titled “The Uncanny Valley,” allude to another monstrous female: Baba Yaga, a wicked, child-eating witch from Russian folklore whose home is surrounded by severed heads on sticks.

Just as creepy is a pair of life-sized ribcages (Ribs 1 and Ribs 2, both 2025) made from pale pink glass with dark red splotches like dried blood. The sculptures are presented “face to face” in recessed spaces on opposite sides of the gallery: the imagined hard interiors of the soft, tufted sculptures. As Freud argued, the uncanny is not always easy to define—but, as Perach’s work proves, you know it when you see it.

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Terrakota | Portuguese Designer Blending Tradition and Modernity

Terrakota emerges as a beacon of contemporary design infused with ancestral artistry in the heart of Portugal’s rich ceramic heritage. Founded in 2020 by Liliana Silva, a native of Barcelos, Terrakota stands as a testament to the enduring allure of handcrafted ceramics and the innovative spirit of modern design. An Heritage Molded in Clay Liliana…

The post Terrakota | Portuguese Designer Blending Tradition and Modernity appeared first on Hue & Eye.

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“Taking Care” at Hannah Hoffman Gallery, Los Angeles

This show is the third in an iteration of exhibitions including our 2022 exhibition Sweet Days of Discipline (Fleur Jaeggy) and our 2024 exhibition Lavinia (Ursula K. La Guin). If you are not already familiar, Taking Care (Joy Williams) contains a collection of stories in which many of the protagonists cannot quite fit what they
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Joan Mitchell & Megan Rooney “PAINTING FROM NATURE” at Espace Louis Vuitton, Beijing 

Beijing Oomph 2025 is a curated roundup of the best contemporary art exhibitions held by galleries and institutions across the city, coinciding with Beijing Dangdai and Gallery Weekend at the end of May. An exhibition gathering the works of two major contemporary painters: Joan Mitchell and Megan Rooney. This presentation, part of the Fondation Louis
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Marina Abramović to premiere new “erotic epic” reenacting folk rituals.

This fall, Marina Abramović will bring sex, ritual, and the supernatural to the stage in a provocative reenactment of Balkan erotic rites. Balkan Erotic Epic (2025) was commissioned by Factory International, the cultural organization in Manchester, England that runs the Manchester International Festival. It will debut at Manchester’s Aviva Studios on October 9th and run until October 25th. Featuring more than 70 performers, the performance will be Abramović’s largest to date.

Balkan Erotic Epic is rooted in Balkan folklore and ancestral customs, exploring themes of desire, spirituality, and the body. Its 13 choreographed scenes and interactive vignettes will be performed by dancers, singers, and musicians.

“In our culture today, we label anything erotic as pornography,” Abramović said in a press statement. “Balkan Erotic Epic is the most ambitious work in my career. This gives me a chance to go back to my Slavic roots and culture, look back to ancient rituals and deal with sexuality, in relation to the universe and the unanswered questions of our existence. Through this project, I would like to show poetry, desperation, pain, hope, suffering, and reflect our own mortality.”

The rituals to be performed include “Fertility Rite,” in which performers will writhe on the ground in a call for fecundity, and “In Scaring the Gods,” which reenacts a ritual of baring one’s body to the sky to dispel storms. In another, “Massaging the Breast,” women performers enact symbolic gestures intended to “awaken the earth” at burial sites, according to a press release.

Abramović will give a talk on October 11th at Aviva Studios to commemorate the performance’s world premiere. Following its inaugural run, Balkan Erotic Epic will travel, beginning in Barcelona in January 2026.

“This new performance work offers an unmissable opportunity for audiences to experience the next chapter of [Abramović’s] creative life—bold, immersive, and on a scale that’s truly unprecedented,” said John McGrath, artistic director and chief executive of Factory International, in a press statement.

Abramović’s other upcoming projects include the launch of a new NFT project, which she discussed on The Artsy Podcast.