My Silence Is Made of Explosions" is a house of mirrors where vision becomes both a weapon and a dream. Each photograph is never a neutral surface: it is fractured by mirrors, refracted through color, layered with symbols, staged as performance, and rewritten on the body itself. Eyes split open like stars, skin turns into script, shadows whisper their secret geographies. These images destabilize the gaze, refusing to be contained by singular perspectives or fixed identities. Instead, they summon the uncanny, the intimate, and the political at once—revealing selves that multiply, shimmer, and resist. In dialogue with the women of surrealism who first turned the camera into a site of psychic revolt, this exhibition extends their legacy into the present, showing how acts of seeing can open portals into other realities, other freedoms, other futures. As Claude Cahun once demanded, “Let me at last be granted the right to see with my own eyes.”This exhibition answers that demand, showing vision as rebellion, as metamorphosis, as freedom.
Curated by noted surrealist connoisseur/collector David Raymond. Co-curated by Bruce Halpryn, art collector and VISU Contemporary owner/curator.