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Bridgeport Times

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

University of Bridgeport: Student Artist Explores the Chemistry of Color

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University of Bridgeport issued the following announcement on March 31.

by Randy Laist, Professor of English, University of Bridgeport

Makeup. Poetry. Social media.

Most people probably don’t think of these three things as being closely related, but for elexified,  makeup, poetry, and social media merge together as interconnected  strategies for examining questions of identity, social roles, and  self-expression.

elexified is the audacious, self-performative persona adopted by  University of Bridgeport undergraduate and prolific multimedia artist  Lex Greene. Greene has been exploring this elexified persona for almost  10 years. As a young dancer, Greene became adept at applying stage  makeup in a way that exaggerated facial features and transformed the  identity of the wearer.

Greene’s experimentation with the transformative potential of makeup  has since grown into a profound and restless quest to explore the  shifting relationship between how we present ourselves to one another  (whether through makeup, social media, or some combination of both) and  who we really are as human beings.

Greene explains, “For a large portion of the last 10 years, I have  used various social media outlets — mostly Instagram — to use elexified  as a persona to navigate gender identity and sexuality as a queer Black  person. I have always felt like a genderless being — and therefore the  energy of elexified — as opposed to an overtly feminine figure or  artist. My makeup artistry has both given me the freedom and forced me  to confront the automatic, gendered assumptions people have been  societally conditioned to associate with a person, or perceived ‘woman,’  wearing makeup.”

 

In Greene’s Instagram posts, Greene’s face becomes a living canvas  where colors blend with one another and with Greene’s own facial  features to create striking images. Greene explains that these striking  images are meant to “strike” very specifically at our preconceptions  about race, gender, sexuality, and identity itself. Greene has also been  exploring these same themes in poems. Drafts of these poems also appear  on the “elexified” Instagram page, as if they are also snapshots of  elexified’s identity, further challenging our expectations about the  nature and scope of human identity.

Greene’s fascination with makeup artistry is an extension of a  lifelong fascination with color. As a child, Greene remembers drawing  family “pictograms” in which red, blue, and pink came to represent a  trinity of father, mother, and child. This private childhood obsession  has since grown into an artistic quest to inquire into the nature of  color itself as a phenomenon that encompasses scientific, psychological,  cultural, and political implications.

Greene hopes to consolidate these ideas in a thesis project devoted  to investigating the elemental, ephemeral, and subjective qualities of  color. Greene’s talents as a poet converge with a commitment to cultural  and political activism in Greene’s ambition to use the elexified  persona as a way of “embodying art on the cellular level” and to become a  “human synthesizer.”

Greene states, “I plan to synthesize all the transcultural,  transhistorical instances where we can all explore the chemistry of  color with limitless confines and with limitless commentary and  connections to peoples, systems, societies, artforms, functions, media —  just a limitless lens on color.”

Check out elexified’s Instagram page and website to see more of elexified’s work.

Randy Laist is a professor of English at Goodwin University and University of Bridgeport. He is the author of several books, including Cinema of Simulation: Hyperreal Hollywood in the Long 1990s and The Twin Towers in Film: A Cinematic History of the World Trade Center.  He has also edited collections of essays in the fields of popular  culture, literary criticism, and pedagogy. He lives in New Haven with  his lovely wife Ann, assorted children, and Sigmund the cat.

Original source can be found here.

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