To Be Held
Emma Joan Bartik
Bachelor of Fine Arts / Bachelor of Arts

To Be Held
Touch is fraught with desire, apprehension, eroticism and trepidation. Cognitive touch stimulates physiological and psychological responses that may be viewed as a biological necessity to the human condition. The experience of physical touch emulates an emotional response characterised by our sensory receptors and informed subjectively through social context. The effect of this contact is determined by two dominant factors: whether your touch is initiated, or received.