Abi Joy Samuel

Episode 15Abi Joy Samuel
Series

Fractured self

Imagine yourself as a mosaic - each shard a memory, each fragment a story. Identity is fragmented, nonlinear, imperfect. Through collage, artists reassemble past and present into visual diaries, embracing the messiness of memory to reveal a self that is ever-evolving, resilient, and beautifully incomplete.

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Episode 15 of 16

Abi Joy Samuel

Primarily working with charcoal, pastel, and oils on canvas, Samuel explores identity through the human form—approaching it as both vessel and construction. She examines the body from multiple angles and translates it onto the two-dimensional surface, often using film stills and images of herself as starting points. For Samuel, the figure is a means of expression and interrogation: a way to test how identity is performed, embodied, and perceived.

Through collages that reveal unconscious chromatic preferences, she draws out palettes charged with emotion; red, in particular, emerges as a declaration of power and femininity.

Her work operates in a state of in-betweenness—slipping between figuration and abstraction, vulnerability and strength. Through layered gesture, form, and colour, Samuel stages identity as both a social construct and a lived, embodied reality.

Episode

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00:00

Sphinx of Hatshepsut

“What if everyone, from the day they were born, had one piece of paper assigned to them, and for each experience they had, a drawing was made, one on top of the other, creating a complete visual impression of the complexity of human existence?”

Hunter, Gatherer
Featured Artist

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Abi Joy Samuel
Artist
Abi Joy Samuel
B.1993, British

My projects begin with lost, weathered things. A waterlogged chair abandoned on the street, an old shirt knotted around a lamp post. These artefacts, rootless yet marked by human touch, hold echoes of a longing for a lost homeland. They become prisms through which I explore my identity as a British Jewish woman. Inspired by Audre Lorde’s call to honour silences, I embrace these fragments as vessels of expression, letting them guide me through a process of deconstructionism, defamiliarization and ultimately, transformation. They find me, these relics, following me back to the studio—physically, photographically, or tattooed to my memory, where they linger like ghosts of my ancestors. I feel a compulsion to dissect them, to peel back their layers as if revealing the very insides of my own being. To transform them into new sculptures—a relic of a future that feels both nostalgic and untouchable. I gravitate toward natural, degradable materials—wood, liquid latex, banana skins—so that these artefacts can eventually return to the earth, creating a loop of past, present, and future—a process of putting to rest. My obsession with probing the self pulls me between sculpture and painting. Pastel, charcoal, and paint become my tools for layering fractured, vulnerable, and violent lines—obsessive marks that trace the outline of my silhouette, shapes which are animalistic and metamorphic in nature. These works push at the boundaries of colour, mood, figuration, and abstraction, exposing something restless in the in-between—capturing a sense of isolation that has stayed with me since I was in foster care. The sexual prowess I carry as armour collides with the undercurrent of vulnerability I cannot shed—two forces in tension, shaping and reshaping the contours of my identity. Abi Joy Samuel ...

More Works By: Abi Joy Samuel

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Benoit Piéron
Series: Fractured selfEpisode 16
Benoit Piéron

Benoît Piéron transforms hospital bedsheets and medical rituals into tender installations that blur illness with intimacy, weaving vulnerability into spaces of resistance and metamorphosis.

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