Maya Fuhr Breaks the Fourth Wall
Fuhr’s work, sealed air tight with nuanced intentionality, utilizes a creative process that echoes the titillating atmosphere present in the show. Beginning with the layering, whipping, and rubbing of handmade latex onto the photos, she later peels off this latex to expose the final work — according to her, evoking a type of spiritual climax. However, this intense tactility doesn’t just stagnate after the work is finished, it continues on through the viewers who are encouraged to touch the works that include sex-positive and queer icons such as Abella Danger, Mia Khalifa, and dominatrix Nila Fix.
This unique luxury of touch, an extremely rare occurrence in the gallery space, allows for the otherwise intangible voyeurism found in the celebrity worlds Fuhr is exploring to transcend into a relationship of tactility, exploring the connection between audience and the previously “untouchable” celebrity.
Considering its emphasis on the contemporary, the show practically functions as an aesthetic marker on the historical timeline of eroticism. The choice to not only bring this dialogue into the public sphere, but to confront it in such an explicit manner — literally encouraging the touching of works — brings the baggage of the past into the light, expanding the reach of the show from merely an observance of contemporary sex culture into a larger scale examination of contemporary sex culture in relation to its daunting history. The recognition of this historical descent that painted eroticism as debauchery exists implicitly in the margins of the show, providing a backdrop for the works on view to penetrate even deeper.