You are all over me
"You are all over me" is a project that challenges the heteronormative gaze while constructing new kinships between humans and non-humans.
The artist, Caterina Carraro, investigates the creative and political power that bodies express in a performance of coexistence with other multiform corporeities, the Guman, genderless and capable of self-fertilization.
She wants to produce images that invoke fluidity and challenge queerphobic and homophobic stereotypes.
The use of chalk symbolises pollination and the Guman's ability to fertilise themselves is more than a conscious choice: the artist reflects on the destruction of the male-female pair and criticises the heteronormative patriarchal approach to procreation.