Kathryn Armitage
‘Disrupting the Beautiful’
Our lastest series ‘Disrupting the Beautiful’ explores fashion not as ornament, but as a language of power. Across two works in this series, Kathryn treats clothing as a site where desire, control, rebellion, and identity collide — staged directly on the female body.
Anchored in the visual language of the Dutch Golden Age, the series borrows its compositional authority: dramatic lighting, hierarchical arrangements, and opulent textiles. Yet those historical references are deliberately destabilised. The male-dominated scenes of power are rewritten, placing the female figure at the centre, not as muses or allegories, but as active agents performing themselves into visibility.
Together, the works position beauty as something unstable rather than fixed: a construct to be questioned, stretched, and disrupted. What emerges is not a rejection of beauty, but a refusal of its traditional limits — and a reassertion of agency through dress, paint, and presence.