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   EMERGING MALTESE FASHION PHOTOGRAPHER
TAKES SWIPE AT INDUSTRY IN
DEBUT SOLO EXHIBITION
DISILLUSIONED TEENS, DOPED NYMPHETS, DESPAIRING MURDERERS,
SLAUGHTERED PIGS – THE SURREAL WORLD OF SCARAB BY
IMPERU GIRGORCISKU
As the Maltese fashion industry begins to garner momentum, so must the critical debate of fashion
photography itself. This means creating a dialogue with a type of image we are so accustomed to seeing, and
exploring more candid realities about how we consume fashion images. The work of Maltese artist
Girgorcisku (born Gregory Hili) is still relatively unknown. But Scarab – the debut solo exhibition of Imperu
Girgorcisku – will mark the advent of a local artist who has taken on board the challenge of initiating this
dialogue with fashion photography.
“Imperu Girgorcisku is my own world which acted as my escape from troubled periods of my life. These
periods controlled me in the way I feel the fashion image controls those who gaze at it”. The Central Saint
Martins graduate also feels strongly about the pressure fashion images put on today’s young boys and girls,
conforming to what he feels are out-dated conceptions of the ‘right’ way to be: “In the past, these structures
harnessed a spirit of acceptance; everyone knew their place within a grand order of society. But in a new
world where those structures have disintegrated, where we can be whoever we want to be, we have become
more competitive. Our world has changed, but our mindset hasn’t. We end up subjecting ourselves to our
own self-made structures – influenced by the conceptions of the past – in the spirit of inner anxiety and
hatred. We have become like scarabs, feeding and reproducing in our own dung spheres of ‘perfection’.”
Just as his ‘empire’ empowered the artist over his turbulent past, Girgorcisku wants to provide that same
conviction for teens and young adults struggling to cope with social pressures fashion is at least partly
responsible for enforcing. “As an image-maker, I am in a position of control over the imaginary worlds of
consumers. Therefore, I have a moral obligation to question the truth (or allusion) of that control. This is in
the spirit of a new world where no one is untouchable, where everyone – regardless of their objective status –
comes closer together, united as we reach yet another milestone in the evolution of humanity.”
Scarab will launch a private view on Thursday 16 September 2010, 8pm, at 43 Lascaris Wharf, Valletta. The
exhibition will then be open to the public from 5pm-8pm at the same address every day before closing on
Tuesday 21 September 2010.
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If you would like more information about this topic, or to schedule an interview with the artist, please contact Gregory Hili on (+356)
79933769 or via email at
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
.
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