Ruby Nilsson explores immortal trans bodies in new work

Malmö artist Ruby Nilsson presents the performance piece 'Respawn' at Inkonst, challenging accusations of trans women as necrophilic intruders. The work draws on themes of immortality and gothic horror, inspired by a harsher climate for trans people. Dancer Liza Tegel embodies an immortal spirit that changes body and gender.

At Inkonst in Malmö, artist Ruby Nilsson is working on her new performance piece 'Respawn,' which explores the concept of immortality in relation to trans people's bodies. The title 'Respawn' comes from gaming and refers to enemies that resurrect after being killed. The work addresses accusations from trans-exclusionary feminism that trans women are necrophilic intruders on women's bodies, and Nilsson chooses to lean into these stereotypes.

'How do you kill a body that is immortal?', Nilsson asks in the piece.

Since Monday, she has been finalizing the production in Inkonst's basement, with a projector displaying the word 'resurrection' and white smoke filling the floor. The piece is about an immortal spirit summoner that changes body and gender and is now punished, with the character's last chance to defend itself. Dancer Liza Tegel performs the role, wearing a mask cast from Nilsson's face and a wig mimicking the artist's hair.

'Traces of me are everywhere, even if I myself am not visible,' says Nilsson.

The artist describes her work as a way to own the horror and gothic projected onto trans people. She mentions a shift in recent years toward a harsher climate for trans people globally.

'We are seeing the beginning of a global persecution of trans people,' she says.

Despite the dark theme, the piece ends with a message of hope: even if trans people die, they will return. Nilsson sees the art as therapy to cope with a nightmarish reality.

'I will lean into being the villain,' she says.

関連記事

Realistic illustration of Resident Evil heroes Leon, Chris, and Jill with Capcom's announcement banner celebrating Requiem's sales and character retention.
AIによって生成された画像

Capcom plans to retain Resident Evil veterans like Leon

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

Resident Evil Requiem director Koshi Nakanishi and producer Masato Kumazawa stated that Capcom has no plans to retire iconic characters such as Leon S. Kennedy, Chris Redfield, and Jill Valentine. In a post-mortem interview, they emphasized the enduring appeal of these mainstays. The game, celebrating the series' 30th anniversary, has sold over 7 million copies in two months.

Houston black metal band Necrofier has released a music video for 'Fires of the Apocalypse, Light My Path I,' the opening track of their third album Transcend Into Oblivion, out now via Metal Blade Records. This follows their earlier single and video for 'Fires of the Apocalypse, Light My Path III.' The album's three-part narrative explores awakening, struggle, and rebirth in a Luciferian 'dark night of the soul.'

AIによるレポート

Tina Rose, who recently turned 70, has started a one-woman band and released her first solo album. She lives in Hällefors and stresses that dreams do not die with age. Now she is launching a career as a musician.

American author Rachel Kushner spoke with Agerpres about her latest novel, 'Creation Lake', which was recently translated into Romanian and shortlisted for major literary prizes. The book features a freelance spy infiltrating an eco-anarchist collective in southwestern France, alongside a reclusive philosopher. Kushner shared insights into her inspirations, character development, and recurring themes like community and climate change.

AIによるレポート

Danish artist Esben Weile Kjær kicked off the Toaster Performance Biennale with a new version of his performance piece 'Hardcore Freedom' at Den Frie Udstilling. The event drew 1,600 attendees who danced on a lit-up chessboard floor after a freeform performance. DJs Courtesy and Europa followed with sets.

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否