Murphy, Sarah Grace2010-04-072010-04-0720082010-04-07http://hdl.handle.net/1828/2493Contemporary Canadian artist Shary Boyle's varied body of work includes: drawings, paintings, performance art and sculpture. While Boyle has received national and international recognition, there has not been an in-depth scholarly study of this prolific artist. In particular, this thesis will focus on Boyle's lace draped porcelain figures, created between 2002-2006, as well as select drawings from her "Porcelain Fantasy Series." It will examine her use of both the familiar, as well as the subversive powers of the grotesque, as she appropriates visual motifs used in traditional porcelain figurines. Through the grotesque she disrupts and challenges patriarchal constructions, and the consumption, of feminine beauty that is typically represented in these figurines. Her work both critiques and draws attention to restrictions these constructions have placed on women, as well as providing images of emancipation.enAvailable to the World Wide WebGrotesque in artAestheticsPorcelain, CanadianUVic Subject Index::Humanities and Social Sciences::Communication and the Arts::ArtBeauty and the grotesque in the porcelain work of Shary Boyle : a study in subversion.Thesis