Bodies Beneath the Surface
A defining shift in Mozzone’s career began in 2011 during an afternoon at a swimming pool. Watching her daughter beneath the water, she noticed ribbons of sunlight sliding across the surface while the child’s form bent and changed through motion and refraction. What might have passed as a brief family moment became a lasting artistic revelation. She began photographing the scene as reference material, captivated by how water could transform the familiar body into something fluid, fractured, and radiant. From that experience emerged her celebrated Fractured Light series, a body of work that has remained central to her practice. The series gave structure to questions she had long pursued about observation and beauty, while opening new concerns with motherhood, memory, and time. By returning again and again to the pool environment, she found a subject that continually renews itself. Every movement of water creates another arrangement of light, another temporary image ready to disappear.
Within these paintings, the figure is rarely presented as conventional portraiture. Identity is often softened, with faces obscured, turned away, or made secondary to gesture and atmosphere. This choice shifts attention from individual likeness to shared human experience. A swimmer beneath the surface may suggest childhood freedom, introspection, vulnerability, or the strange calm of suspension. The body becomes a vessel for memory rather than a record of one person. Viewers may recall their own sensations: bubbles rushing past the ears, muffled sound underwater, sunlight flickering across arms, or the altered proportions of limbs seen through moving water. Such associations help explain the broad appeal of her work. It invites recognition without requiring personal narrative. Mozzone understands that anonymity can create intimacy when handled with care. By withholding specifics, she allows emotional access, turning private scenes into images that belong to many people at once.
Water itself functions as more than setting. In Mozzone’s art, it carries symbolic weight linked to life, cleansing, danger, renewal, and the passage of time. It can cradle the body or unsettle it, conceal form or illuminate it. Bubbles often appear as recurring motifs, suggesting rising thoughts, impulses, or unseen energies moving upward through the composition. Beneath the surface, time seems briefly altered. Motion slows, sound dims, and ordinary experience becomes suspended. This makes the pool an ideal stage for reflection in every sense of the word. Light enters, breaks apart, and reforms into shifting patterns that animate skin and space alike. Through these elements, Mozzone turns water into a psychological landscape where transformation feels natural. Her paintings do not simply depict swimmers. They explore how environments change consciousness, how perception bends, and how moments of everyday life can become charged with mystery.
