Om Iiu Susiraja: A style called a dead fish
"Subtle yet incandescent rage shimmers everywhere in Susiraja's output. It's just one of the many reasons why her art-so mesmerizing, terrorizing, gnarly, monstrous-is incredibly beautiful." -Alex Jovanovich, ArtforumOver the past 15 years, Iiu Susiraja has taken photographs of herself in domestic settings, most often in her home in Turku, Finland. Simultaneously seductive, abject, stylized and vulnerable, Susiraja's works are grounded in unabashed yet private performances for the camera. In these stagings, household objects-tablecloths, umbrellas, hot dogs, bananas, treadmills, rubber duckies and dead fish-become co-conspirators in her confrontations with the lens. Situated between the slapstick and the deadpan, Susiraja's works locate uneasiness in the comfortable, and vice versa. Published on the occasion of the artist's first US museum exhibition, Iiu Susiraja: A style called a dead fish traces the trajectory of Susiraja's practice from her earliest photographs (circa 2007) to the present. The publication also features poems by Susiraja and an essay by curator Jody Graf. Iiu Susiraja (born 1975) earned an MFA from the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts. She was featured as the cover story for ArtForum's February 2022 issue. Her recent solo exhibitions include MoMA PS1, Ramiken Gallery, SKMU Museum, KIASMA, Kadel Willborn Gallery, Francois Ghebaly Gallery, PS2 Gallery, VB Photographic Centre, Ramiken Crucible and Fotogalleriet Format. Her work is in public and private collections worldwide, including at the Adam Lindenmann Collection, the University of Chicago, the Rubell Family Collection, the Finnish Museum of Photography collection, Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art and the Finnish National Gallery.
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