Clara Fortis: The Body as Witness
Fortis did not begin in fine art alone. Her earliest studies were in fashion design, a direction that once seemed safer and more industry-oriented before she recognised a stronger need to create within her own framework. That shift away from fashion remains important because she did not abandon what she learned there. Instead, she carried forward an acute sensitivity to the body, surface, structure, and the politics of presentation. In her sculptural language, one can sense an understanding of how forms wrap, restrict, reveal, or frame human presence. Clothing and sculpture both negotiate space around the body, and Fortis turns that shared logic toward psychological expression. Her pieces often suggest postures, containment, and gesture rather than depicting the body literally. This gives them a charged ambiguity. They are objects, yet they also feel like traces of human states. The move from fashion to fine art therefore was not a rupture but a transformation, allowing concerns with embodiment to enter a more open and critical field.
Her research-led practice examines human behaviour through installation, sculpture, and painting. Drawing on psychology and related conceptual sources, she creates environments that feel emotionally immediate rather than academically distant. Fortis is particularly interested in how social dynamics leave marks on people, especially when individuals feel ignored, excluded, or unable to speak meaningfully. She often works with harsh materials, especially steel, to register the brutality that can hide inside everyday interactions. Metal in her hands is not simply industrial matter. It becomes a carrier of emotional weight, capable of expressing rigidity, injury, pressure, and endurance. Through this material language, viewers are invited to sense rather than merely understand the consequences of social cruelty. Her works can feel intimate and severe at once, combining vulnerability with force. That tension is central to her style. It resists sentimentality while refusing emotional emptiness, insisting that relationships and power structures are lived through the body.
Recurring symbols such as ears, teeth, and entrapped figures reveal how carefully Fortis constructs her vocabulary. These motifs speak to hearing, speech, aggression, consumption, pain, and survival. Many sculptures are organised around bodily implication, suggesting communication through stance or withheld movement. Even when presented as static objects, they often carry the charge of performance, as though an action has just happened or is about to occur. This quality makes the viewer more than an observer. One becomes aware of one’s own posture, distance, and participation. Fortis uses that awareness to raise difficult questions: Who is listened to? Who is silenced? What emotional cost follows exclusion? How do casual behaviours shape another person’s internal world? Rather than offering moral slogans, she creates situations in which these questions can be felt physically. The result is art that asks for attention not through spectacle, but through sharpened sensitivity to human interaction and consequence.
