Marais Site → Vitrine
Carrier Bags of Power – Young Joo Lee
“The works in Carrier Bags of Power1 were made after my daughter’s birth. Pregnancy and childbirth made me aware that each of us is shaped by a lineage: our mothers – their bodies, love, endurance, and struggles. Women’s bodies are carrier bags: vessels of life, memory, and care, not instruments of conquest.
Becoming a mother made me long for a different social order, one in which care is not private labor or moral virtue, but a principle of power. To move toward that possibility, I began dismantling the symbolism of spiritual and temporal authority: hierarchies embedded in religion, creation stories, and today’s politics, where a single figure stands above other living beings.
From there, I turned to societies organized differently from patriarchal models. Matrilineal and matrifocal communities have endured despite globalization, often a process of patriarchalization. They offer living examples of alternative structures: environmentally sustainable, gender-equal, and community-based, where women, children, and elders are valued.
Through these works, I propose a foundation for reimagining who holds power, and for building structures capable of sustaining a world organized around care.” – Young Joo Lee
1 In reference to Ursula K. Le Guin’s essay The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction, 1986
Young Joo Lee (Corée du Sud) est actuellement en résidence par le biais du programme 2–12
From 21 January to 21 February 2026
Visible de 10h à 19h
Entrée libre