Similar Exhibitions
Guestbook
Press Release
The exhibition Ink in Milk traces how vulnerability can give rise to new modes of resistance. The works on display spring from different yet equally challenging life experiences: some grapple with the conditions shaped by disability or illness, while others open onto the fragile yet insistent – intimate, personal, and political – realities of exhaustion and motherhood.
The exhibition approaches vulnerability not as an individual failing but as a social condition. As Canadian philosopher Shelley Tremain – whose work draws on feminist critical disability studies – writes:
“Seniors and elders (...) aren’t inherently vulnerable; nor are disabled people in institutions inherently vulnerable. Both of these groups (among others) are rendered vulnerable. That is, they are made vulnerable. Vulnerability isn’t a characteristic that certain individuals possess or embody. Like disability, vulnerability is a naturalized apparatus o…
Exhibition Space

Press Release
The exhibition Ink in Milk traces how vulnerability can give rise to new modes of resistance. The works on display spring from different yet equally challenging life experiences: some grapple with the conditions shaped by disability or illness, while others open onto the fragile yet insistent – intimate, personal, and political – realities of exhaustion and motherhood.
The exhibition approaches vulnerability not as an individual failing but as a social condition. As Canadian philosopher Shelley Tremain – whose work draws on feminist critical disability studies – writes:
“Seniors and elders (...) aren’t inherently vulnerable; nor are disabled people in institutions inherently vulnerable. Both of these groups (among others) are rendered vulnerable. That is, they are made vulnerable. Vulnerability isn’t a characteristic that certain individuals possess or embody. Like disability, vulnerability is a naturalized apparatus o…


















































