What’s it wish to exist on this planet as a girl? It’s one thing that I, as a person, can solely try to know, however by no means totally comprehend. To be continuously noticed and judged primarily based on look, clothes, how they pose and behave. It’s what’s on the coronary heart of Xilichen Hua’s work, ‘Resistance of Voice’, the place the artist remarks she is ‘drained in the way in which all girls know’.
The work features a digital illustration of the artist, highlighting that, whereas the digital sphere differs from the true world, the identical objectification of girls has been transferred into that realm. Consider feminine online game characters with inconceivable physiques and sporting much less clothes than their male counterparts, or the troubling rise of deepfakes, which have been disproportionately focused at girls.

In ‘Resistance of Voice’, her digital avatar is architecturally boxed in, heightening the sense of being unable to flee the gaze of these watching, together with us. Nonetheless, the work ends with the gaze switching locations, so the viewers is now being noticed, suggesting that this view is being subverted to empower the artist.


The work jogged my memory of Yoko Ono’s ‘Lower Piece’, through which viewers members had been invited to chop off her clothes with a pair of scissors. Whereas it was the artist’s option to take part, it reminds us of how susceptible girls are in society at present to others’ actions. It was a mannequin that was constructed upon in Marina Abramovic’s ‘Rhythm 0’, the place viewers members may topic her to any expertise utilizing over 70 completely different objects, and that culminated with one participant pointing a loaded gun at her head.
Whereas Hua’s work doesn’t invite direct viewers interplay, it bears the hallmarks of those efficiency artworks by questioning the position of girls in society and the vulnerability they proceed to face, even after vital strides in gender equality.


The work exists within the digital realm however attracts on the lengthy legacy of artwork historical past, difficult the male gaze again to Édouard Manet’s ‘Olympia’, the place a nude lady stares again at us, not like the averted gazes that preceded this portray in artwork historical past.
It may be in comparison with modern artists who all confront us with larger-than-life feminine our bodies, reminiscent of Jenny Saville and Claudette Johnson. Within the digital realm, the subversion of the male gaze remains to be growing, and one standout piece can be Amalia Ulman’s ‘Excellences & Perfections’, an Instagram avatar she created as a efficiency piece that had her followers believing they had been following one lady’s journey into vulnerability and beauty surgical procedure.


The digital realm is fertile floor for revisiting the message about how girls are seen on this planet, particularly how they’re typically depicted in these areas. It’s inside this enviornment that Xilichen Hua’s work exists, and I stay up for her growing these ideas additional in her future work, to recognise what it means to be a girl on this planet at present. As she states in her work, ‘I don’t should be one factor; I’m many’.

