• IHMISSILPPURI
  • IHMISSILPPURI
  • IRTIPÄÄSTÄMINEN / LETTING GO pysäytyskuva videosta, still image from video
  • SURU / SORROW pysäytyskuva-sarja videosta, still images from video
  • SEKSUAALISUUDEN JA LESBOUDEN HÄPEÄ 10 VUODEN AVIOLIITON JÄLKEEN / SHAME OF SEXUALISM AND LESBIANISM AFTER 10 YEARS OF MARRIAGE pysäytyskuva videosta, still image from video
  • MITÄTÖITY NAISEUS / INVALIDATED WOMANHOOD pysäytyskuva videosta, still image from video
  • SYVÄT HAAVAT / DEEP SCARS pysäytyskuva videosta, still image from video

Jenny Suhonen

Humanshredder

Jätkä 2 4.10.-19.10.2014

Jenny Suhonen
Humanshredder
4.10.-19.10. 2014
Galleria Huuto Jätkäsaari 2

The Humanshredder project by Jenny Suhonen goes through personal emotions and experiences, turning them into images through processes that utilize performance art, installations and videos. The Galleria Huuto exhibition includes videos of the performances, compiled into one installation.

The performance project kicked off in 2012 and since then Suhonen has done over 100 performances. She has asked people to bring items that are associated with emotions or experiences that they would like to get rid of – losses, unrealized wishes, unrealistic expectations and many other things that life may involve. During the performance, the artist takes an item that she calls a burden, breaks it in the presence of viewers and stores the pieces in jars. Some of the experiences have been sent in the form of a letter that the artist reads and then destroys. She uses the pieces to create installations that have been previously displayed, for example, at Galleria Oksasenkatu 11 in Helsinki and at Galerie Pleiku in Berlin.

The Humanshredder performances allow the participants to see how the difficult experiences and the related emotions are reflected outside of oneself, destroyed and then turned into exhibits. The participants get rid of their burdens, but at the same time they also have to give their emotions to the artist and face them again when the items are publically displayed. The artist, on the other hand, acquires material to build the installation but she also has to store the fragments of the items and thus carry part of the burden.

The performance resembles a ritual. A ritual refers to activities that are performed due to their symbolic or emotional meaning. It may have both a collective and individual meaning. The purpose of an individual ritual is often to publically reveal a private experience that is so intense that one is not able to handle it alone. The ritual allows the experience to be expressed in a way that helps the individual deal with it and get rid of it.

Items often have an important role in rituals. They are full of meaning and are often used to lead rituals. With the items we can control the experiences connected to us. They help us draw a line between ourselves and others and they act as an extension to our body. Items related to a ritual are often situated in a space between oneself and the world, oneself and others, inside and outside. When they break away from their everyday role to become the target of a ritual, they act as an extension of the participant’s self. When an item is chosen to represent a human experience, treated like a human, given a name and emotions are reflected on it, it becomes part of oneself. When an item that represents a negative experience is destroyed as part of a performance, the negatively charged part of the participant’s self will be destroyed and he or she can move on.

The video will take the viewer to a slightly more abstract level. The item and the story, the personal memory of an event and the related emotion will permanently take a visual form. The personal meaning will disappear and the viewer will have to face the strongly charged symbols. He/she will be involved in the breaking of these symbolic items and the violent destruction will be repeated again and again on the screen. The viewer will move further away from the meanings that were given to the items during the performance and will be free to give their own meanings to the events shown in the video.
The Humanshredder installation moves between the modern world and archaic symbols. It utilizes not only the items that the participants bring with them but also, more importantly, the emotions that are associated with the items. Even though the installation works as a therapeutic process, its meaning is ultimately esthetic. The healing experience of a viewer or participant is a by-product of the installation, but the real meaning is created when these emotions are made visible.

Mari Vuolanto
Visual artist
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Jenny Suhonen (b.1978) is a Helsinki-based visual artist (Free Art School, 2012). She works as a painter and as a performance artist. Her art deals with different forms and natures of humanity with the aim of taking it to pieces. Suhonen tries to give the audience an opportunity to face themselves. She wants to stop and give time.

www.jennysuhonen.com