Darci Hanna
MFA ’24 Fine Arts 2D
Darci Hanna’s recent works consider the persistent boundaries and constraints of traditional gender roles that point to deeper systems of value within the dominant culture in the United States. In her latest body of work, she aims to tease out the numerous subtle rules that define the contours of mothers’ lives, while they also navigate intense social pressures to live up to unrealistic maternal standards – to be beautiful, infallible, inexhaustible, and self-sacrificing. She draws on her interest in sociology and linguistics as well as her professional background as an art historian to inform her studio practice. Historical and archival research often helps shape her work. From baking and serving breast-shaped cookies (that emphasize breasts’ primary function of providing nourishment) to creating quilts inspired by paleolithic figurines and historic birthing practices, she questions contemporary social beliefs about who deserves bodily autonomy, how different bodies are valued, and whose physical and emotional labor is seen, appreciated, and compensated.
Featured in: