Message Sent

Your secure message was sent successfully

OK

VILLA REQUEST FORM

Please fill in this form and our team will contact and assist you within the day!

* required field

or

MY DATES ARE FLEXIBLE

How did you hear about us?

Alternatively, please call our Reservation Team directly at +30 1234567891 or email us at [email protected]

YACHT CHARTER REQUEST FORM

Please fill in this form and our team will contact and assist you within the day!

* required field

or

MY DATES ARE FLEXIBLE

How did you hear about us?

Alternatively, please call our Reservation Team directly at +30 1234567891 or email us at [email protected]

The Armory Show 2016 // Autopsy by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud

Autopsy by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud
03-06 March 2016 Armory Show New York

share this page

Carwan Gallery has been invited by The Armory show in the occasion of the exhibition "African Perspectives" curated by Maria Cristina Didero and presente newly commissioned work from Carlo and Mary-Lynn Massoud at Armory Show fair in New York. 

Autopsy is the first collaboration between siblings Mary-Lynn Massoud (ceramist) and Carlo Massoud (product designer). The project originated from a close collaboration between Lebanese designers and South African artisans. Autopsy explores the fragility of life, inspired by South African traditional fertility dolls.

Autopsy explores the fragility of life, inspired by the South African traditional fertility dolls, African dolls across the continent are created for young girls to play with and as a charm to ensure fertility in women. Their shape and costume vary according to region and custom. Frequently dolls are handed from mother to daughter. The dolls are often dressed with traditional garb. When the doll concept is considered on the context of African culture, they are usually not children's playthings, but rather objects that are laden with ritual and religious associations within the community. African dolls are used to teach, and entertain. They are supernatural intermediaries and they are manipulated for ritual purposes. Each of these dolls is unique because they are handmade and are traditionally handed down through generations.

After an investigation in the use and history of the dolls in the region, the Massouds wanted to highlight the different rituals between the tribes and how each tribe symbolizes the protection of the female egg. The project explores the concept of fertility, symbolized by wounds and scars on the surface of the organic objects. Like ethnographic surgeons, the Massouds dissect the rough geometric to unveil certain details through these wounds. The Massouds then integrate the ritual of ornamentation with the use of locally produced materials like bronze and ceramic. This innovative representation of the dolls, brought to a larger scale, brings a new way to express these rituals, in a domestic environment.

The collection is composed of a series of five unique stools/tables editions, realized in casted bronze with bespoke colored oxidations and ceramic. 

Autopsy by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 1 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 5 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 3 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 2 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 6 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 
Autopsy 4 by Carlo & Mary-Lynn Massoud - © Carwan Gallery 

News & Press