Marshall Ingram, "Sweet Break Up"
Foam, Spackle
8”x8”
2023
Our appetite is always bigger than our eyes. Food is to fill a void; when ignored causes it can cause us pain. Art should feel the same. Consuming more of something that satisfies you is not greed nor gluttony but satisfaction. Relationships are often attached to sweeter intentions. What happens when those sweet things turn sour? Do we go on a hunger strike? Or do we keep ingesting tasteless intentions?
Indulge in your hunger, and take a bite.
STATEMENT
Art should test you. Trauma can be a burden with multifarious consequences. However, the aftermath is not relegated to negative results. Creativity can be an outlet to express inner burdens and diminish personal and sociological demons. By connecting to viewers through performative displays, installations, and sculpture my work is designed to generate empathetic situations with the viewers. From transgender lives to childhood abuse these themes are slowly unpacked as the viewer’s interaction is prolonged.
Representation has always been an impactful theme when I create. We are bound to contracts of family and gender roles in a life planned for us, but we do not have to be defined by them.
BIO
Marshall Ingram is a nonbinary expanded media and performance artist based out of Chickasha, OK. Born in Fort Worth, Texas their work addresses LGBTQIA+ themes in rural communities. Marshall brings awareness to minorities through exhibitions such as Art Wrecker and the Nesbitt Gallery. Through evocative works, they expand the viewer's perceptions of marginalized groups. Currently, they are studying at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma to earn their Bachelor's in Fine Arts. Marshall plans to attend graduate school and continue their practice as a trans artist.
Foam, Spackle
8”x8”
2023
Our appetite is always bigger than our eyes. Food is to fill a void; when ignored causes it can cause us pain. Art should feel the same. Consuming more of something that satisfies you is not greed nor gluttony but satisfaction. Relationships are often attached to sweeter intentions. What happens when those sweet things turn sour? Do we go on a hunger strike? Or do we keep ingesting tasteless intentions?
Indulge in your hunger, and take a bite.
STATEMENT
Art should test you. Trauma can be a burden with multifarious consequences. However, the aftermath is not relegated to negative results. Creativity can be an outlet to express inner burdens and diminish personal and sociological demons. By connecting to viewers through performative displays, installations, and sculpture my work is designed to generate empathetic situations with the viewers. From transgender lives to childhood abuse these themes are slowly unpacked as the viewer’s interaction is prolonged.
Representation has always been an impactful theme when I create. We are bound to contracts of family and gender roles in a life planned for us, but we do not have to be defined by them.
BIO
Marshall Ingram is a nonbinary expanded media and performance artist based out of Chickasha, OK. Born in Fort Worth, Texas their work addresses LGBTQIA+ themes in rural communities. Marshall brings awareness to minorities through exhibitions such as Art Wrecker and the Nesbitt Gallery. Through evocative works, they expand the viewer's perceptions of marginalized groups. Currently, they are studying at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma to earn their Bachelor's in Fine Arts. Marshall plans to attend graduate school and continue their practice as a trans artist.
Foam, Spackle
8”x8”
2023
Our appetite is always bigger than our eyes. Food is to fill a void; when ignored causes it can cause us pain. Art should feel the same. Consuming more of something that satisfies you is not greed nor gluttony but satisfaction. Relationships are often attached to sweeter intentions. What happens when those sweet things turn sour? Do we go on a hunger strike? Or do we keep ingesting tasteless intentions?
Indulge in your hunger, and take a bite.
STATEMENT
Art should test you. Trauma can be a burden with multifarious consequences. However, the aftermath is not relegated to negative results. Creativity can be an outlet to express inner burdens and diminish personal and sociological demons. By connecting to viewers through performative displays, installations, and sculpture my work is designed to generate empathetic situations with the viewers. From transgender lives to childhood abuse these themes are slowly unpacked as the viewer’s interaction is prolonged.
Representation has always been an impactful theme when I create. We are bound to contracts of family and gender roles in a life planned for us, but we do not have to be defined by them.
BIO
Marshall Ingram is a nonbinary expanded media and performance artist based out of Chickasha, OK. Born in Fort Worth, Texas their work addresses LGBTQIA+ themes in rural communities. Marshall brings awareness to minorities through exhibitions such as Art Wrecker and the Nesbitt Gallery. Through evocative works, they expand the viewer's perceptions of marginalized groups. Currently, they are studying at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma to earn their Bachelor's in Fine Arts. Marshall plans to attend graduate school and continue their practice as a trans artist.