Last semester, I confirmed my topic: Tell modern women to reject the IUD with design and help them choose the birth control method that suits them.
After childbirth, the IUD is embedded in the body and it is like attaching shackles to a women‘s body.
I think that in today's society, the value of women is gradually being replaced by the value of use, and women are being used as tools for procreation and to vent their anger.
It seems that women have been instrumentalised and have lost their right to express themselves in this endless chore.
The IUD is a product of this period, and behind it is a representation of marriage and children, a family, and the problems of the couple.
Last month I went to Spain and was impressed by Keith Haring's work at the Moco Museum in Barcelona.
I decided to use the language of graffiti to represent the modern pressure on women to be themselves and achieve self-worth.
I would like to base this on the characteristics of the fall of man.
Sarah Charlesworth, “stills” series, 1980
Patricia Cawlings, Los Angeles, 1980, gelatin silver print, 78 × 42"
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