Wattis Institute

Ellen Cantor

Cinderella Syndrome

08 Dec 2015 - 10 Feb 2016

Ellen Cantor
Cinderella Syndrome, 2015
installation view, Wattis Institute
Courtesy of Ellen Cantor estate
Photo: Johnna Arnold
ELLEN CANTOR
CINDERELLA SYNDROME
8 December 2015 – 10 February 2016

Co - curated by Jamie Stevens and Fatima Hellberg

An exhibition of videos and drawings by Ellen Cantor (1961–2013).

A prolific artist who lived between New York and London, Cantor combined ready-made materials with diaristic notes and drawings to probe her perceptions and experiences of personal desire and institutional violence.

In her drawings, paintings, collages, and videos, Cantor lifted characters and sequences from iconic films, reorienting the ideological transmissions of the source material. Fictional figures from Disney cartoons, cult horror films, New Wave cinema, and family movies provide a visual foil to Cantor's intimate disclosures. Magnetized by the doeful naivety of characters such as Snow White and Bambi, Cantor would, in her drawings, extend their narrative horizons to include vivid sexual encounters and crisis-ridden relationships.

For the final eight years of her life, Cantor was working on the feature-length film Pinochet Porn. Originally a suite of drawings named Circus Lives from Hell (2005), Pinochet Porn is an episodic narrative about five children growing up under the regime of General Augusto Pinochet in Chile. Featuring a cast of close friends and collaborators, and shot in New York and London, Pinochet Porn stages a libidinal critique of the systematic and sadistic destruction of self-expression and experience.
 

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