…THE IDEA FOR THE PROJECT
…is that – via the image – I wanted to investigate what my body could now express. I thought that there must be some kind of beauty left in this body that I will live with for the rest of my life? If you are a man and have a scar, it could be a sign of bravado, or a violent victory of some kind. But I have also undergone a kind of battle. How far do gender stereotypes govern our way of looking at ourselves? I wanted to crawl under the layers; and dare to expose the fragile, and perhaps, offensive. Scars are not only unwanted marks, they are also signs of lived life,” says Åsa Kalmér.
Both Åsa Kalmér and Jörgen Hjerdt work with shaping images via film, theatre and writing. Now they meet in a new forum: where Åsa uses her experience in directing and acting and, Jörgen, his experience in photography and storytelling.
It all began when Jörgen and I were in our studio on a hot summer day. For six months I – my body – had been treated with chemotherapy, radiation and medicine. Jörgen and I walked around bare-chested. It was different to be without a breast on one side of my chest. Almost so that I felt a little androgynous. I wore a wig because of chemotherapy. It was like a shell to crawl into. I was disguised. But who was I now in my new body? We began photographing, Åsa continues.