Ablution: Duality and Hybridity in Sculptural Practice

The purpose of this thesis is to critically interrogate the duality of the sacred and profane as it is situated within traditional Catholic doctrine through the creation of hybrid sculptural objects. This thesis proposes that traditional understandings of dichotomies can be usefully critiqued throug...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hight, Melanie (Author)
Other Authors: Redmond, Monique (Contributor), Braddock, Christopher (Contributor)
Format: Others
Published: Auckland University of Technology, 2017-10-24T23:07:47Z.
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Summary:The purpose of this thesis is to critically interrogate the duality of the sacred and profane as it is situated within traditional Catholic doctrine through the creation of hybrid sculptural objects. This thesis proposes that traditional understandings of dichotomies can be usefully critiqued through the perspective of indivisibility. This proposition brings to the dichotomy of the sacred and the profane a focus of relationship, integration, interdependence and continuum, rather than segregation, polarity and opposition. It is the argument of this thesis that reviewing dichotomy from this perspective may serve to displace the traditional hierarchy and afford opportunity for new understanding allowing for a more integrated view of 'other'. Using Catholic iconography as the signifi er for the sacred and the domestic environment as a context for the profane, my studio practice explores the relationship between these signifi ers. I intend my sculptural objects to operate as hybrids that can be sited in an 'in-between' space that is neither sacred nor profane but references both.