
Bruno Munari, Speaking Italien, the fine art of the gesture, 1958, ti prego

Anne Ferran, “1-38”
“1-38 begins with a study of departmental health records and photographs from a women’s mental asylum in mid-twentieth century Sydney. Rather than re-photographing the images in their entirety, Anne decided to crop in, focusing on the gesture of the hands, the area of the torso, and most importantly, keeping the identity of each woman concealed. What results is a sequence of body movements, where each hand emotes anxiety, anger and stillness, sometimes clutching at one’s clothes, or making gestures of self-protection.”
–Lisa Blas


Raw Material Washing Hands, Normal (A of A/B) Raw Material Washing Hands, Normal (B of A/B)
1996

Kiki Smith
Catchers I
2018
Intaglio, photogravure and engraving on Hahnemühle hand torn paper
Image/plate size: 11 x 8 inches (27.9 x 20.3 cm)
Paper size: 16 ½ x 13 ¼ inches (41.9 x 33.7 cm)

Mater Dolorosa, Pedro de Mena (Spanish, Granada 1628–1688 Málaga), Partial-gilt polychrome wood, Spanish, probably Málaga

Anne Ferran, 1-38, 2003.

“We know very little about the women in Anne Ferran’s 2003 series 1-38. They are not named and their faces have been cropped out of each photograph. All we see are their fraying cardigans and clenched fists.
These women, 38 unidentified female patients from a Sydney psychiatric hospital in the 1940s, have slipped through the cracks of our collective memory. Ferran did not take these photographs. They are archival images that have been enlarged and cropped. Selecting and editing these images, Ferran interrogates the erasure of each woman’s identity. By rescuing the pictures from the dark recesses of the archive she unsettles the systemized logic of the institution. These women are meant to remain in their files, their lives reduced to nothing more than a ‘case history’. But here they are memorialized. Though the women remain unknown, they are visible. Their silence speaks.
Ferran’s images exhume forgotten and overlooked personal narratives, giving the ghosts of these anonymous women space to move. These haunted photographs play on the edge of concealment and exposition. Even though the women’s facial expressions and identity are missing, their suffering is easily legible. We see it in their splayed fingers and white knuckles, reaching and grasping but not quite holding on.
1-38 (detail) 2003 Inkjet print 32.8 x 48.3 cm. Image courtesy the artist and Stills Gallery
These hands are neither passive nor submissive. They do not hang limp but point and clutch and contort. They betray the fear that institutional incarceration breeds, revealing the horrors that exist behind closed doors and beyond the frame.
The clothes do the same. One woman’s cardigan is missing a button and gapes open just above her navel while another’s is misaligned. In a different image a piece of twisted fabric hangs out of a buttonhole like a severed umbilical chord. Some women are lucky enough to have coats to protect them against the cold. Others are swaddled in blankets. Holding each woman’s arms down, the blankets speak of restraint rather than comfort.
Enlarging and cropping these archival photographs, Ferran works with the mutable boundaries that delineate visible and invisible histories. She teases out the peripheral and the inconspicuous, allowing unspoken narratives to infiltrate — to haunt — what remains perceptible.
The photographs of these women were also collated into a set of four books. The first book, INSULA book 1 reproduces the images as they appear in the series 1-38. The same photographs feature in the other three books but they have been cropped again. INSULA book 3&4 show only the hands. In INSULA book 2 we see each woman’s face. The books themselves have never been exhibited alongside the 1-38 prints but photographs of them have. In these photographs, each page appears within the frame, superimposed on top of one another. The books become a blur, like stacked frames in a fast-paced animation. The images printed on each page melt into one another as the 38 women fold into one.”
—Isabel Parker Philip, Excerpt Magazine Issue six: Life Death and Bureaucracy

