Saturday, April 7, 2012

    The premise of the project is to observe the dispositions of young people while dressed and undressed and note the differences that arise outside the physical. I believe that body and mind are intertwined, and patterns of self-reproof are inhibiting at best. In a country where nakedness is immodest, and our own skin seen as something to veil and forget about, we become strangers to our natural selves. There is sadness in this that is rarely spoken about. When I decided to photograph young men and women with and without their garments, I saw how receptive many people are to a genuine request to see them as they are. Every person I photographed told me something about themselves I did not know before: how naked She feels without her glasses, the religious values behind His style of dress, how Her scar was made. I learned the reasons for the things beneath their clothes: rosary beads, a tattoo, a burn mark. People my age seem to understand the repercussions of the way they look, and it is a part of our molding and shaping to be beautiful, tall, overweight, dark skinned, freckled, blonde, because that is how we are treated. I want to take away a part of that by removing garments. From what I have seen and experienced, undressing makes people take another look at them selves physically and psychologically and I think it is healthy to look at the body with as much understanding as we can gather. I want to have a deep-seated affection for the physical that does not give way to judgment from outside or in.






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