Asia Stewart

I use performance to question the limits of the category of “woman” and assess how constructions of gender intersect and interact with race, class, and sexuality. I particularly focus on the liminal position of Black women, who are readily identified as being spectacular figures: either sub-human, machine, or monstrous. Featuring looped behaviors, my performances flirt with excess and absurdity to rival the sheer incomprehensibility of the systems and structures that have been manufactured to oppress Others. Each performance centers body memories and is inspired by my attempts to reckon with my estranged relationship to my gendered and racialized queer self.

In Gorgades, I covered my entire body in dark, artificial hair. While clothed in my dress of hair, I performed normal tasks like braiding, tying, and combing my hair, and completed actions, like sweeping the floor.

Asia Stewart is a Brooklyn-based performance artist whose conceptual work centers the body as a living archive. After receiving degrees in the social sciences from Cambridge and Harvard University, she has sought ways to embody abstract sociological theories and transform the language specific to studies of race, gender, sexuality, and diaspora into materials that can be felt and worn on the body. As a National YoungArts Winner in Musical Theatre and a former National Arts Policy Roundtable Fellow with Americans for the Arts, Stewart uses her past experiences on stage to inject her work with a heightened sense of theatricality. In 2020, Stewart concluded her first independent performance series, Graft, which attempts to capture the violence that constructions of whiteness and femininity wrought on Black bodies. Works from that series are currently being showcased in Sentient.Art.Film’s 2021 Omnibus project and appeared in Whitney White’s installation experience and musical DEFINITION at the Mercury Store in Brooklyn in Summer 2021. Stewart has begun a new performance series on intergenerational trauma and sexual violence as an artist-in-residence at the NARS Foundation. That work will premiere in Brooklyn in June 2022.