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The Waiting Room / Anorexia Tableau with Threads of Fate

ANOREXIA TABLEAU

 

Damselfly Chair

Reassembled, carved and wood-burned chair bones; mirror platform

 

Spill

Beaded bracelets created by college students and family members in Kansas, Minnesota, and Illinois

 

Haunted

Headphones; audio recordings and sound compositions: No One Could Make Me Eat, Frightened to Death, Ana Wants

 

A skeletal, distressed, cut up wooden chair personifies the painful emptiness experienced by victims of eating disorders.

 

Spilled on the floor are hundreds of intestine-like, blood red, white and blue beaded bracelets, like those sometimes worn by “Pro-Ana” or “Pro-Mia” members. Fueled by the Internet and social media, this disturbing ‘secret society’ trend presents eating disorders as desirable behavior and simply a “lifestyle choice.” Along with virtual communities, these web-based groups provide effective starvation technique tips and post ‘thinspiration’ images of anorexic celebrities and models. They encourage those battling eating disorders to ‘stick with it,’ and can trigger relapse for those in recovery.

 

Anorexia is the most deadly mental illness. A person with the disease has a dangerously low body weight and thinks about food constantly, but limits the amount eaten to gain a sense of control over their lives. 12% of people who develop anorexia will die from complications. The mortality rate for eating disorders is 12 times higher than that of all other illnesses for females 15-24 years old. 85% of anorexics and bulimics are female, but the incidence in males is growing. Only one in ten people with an eating disorder receives treatment.

 

Threads of Fate on the wall came from "Measuring Time in the Waiting Room", an ambient performance in the gallery presented at the opening reception. Directed and costumed by Sharon L. Sullivan, Washburn University associate theater professor, this modern interpretation of the mythical Greek Fates as they might appear in a contemporary doctor’s office will be performed by Arrissa Utemark, Samantha Heath, and Ashley Vaughan. Written by Marguerite Perret.

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Uploaded on February 13, 2012
Taken on January 13, 2012