Monday, 17 February 2014

representing invisible disability visually.

For a long time i have been very frustrated. the traditional symbol for disabled people doesn't include me. As it is a person sitting in a wheelchair it seems to suggest that you can only be properly disabled if you use a wheelchair. Its adoption and popularity in society perpetuates the myth and does further damage to us who are invisibly disabled. As a visual artist, the question of how can i visually represent something that is invisible? Got to me. Alot. 

When something like this gets to me i have to do something about it. The shadowing of the wheelchair symbol against the man/woman was a slow but sudden process of serendipty and luck. I had been playing with shadows on photoshop and then it struck me.


I make no apology for the design, and as i didnt take any credit for it i love seeing it pop up in random and unexpected places.


However, when i seen this blog critising it i felt i had to respond as either the original or one of the designers of this image. http://thebodyisnotanapology.tumblr.com/post/76733350346/the-problem-with-person-first-language-whats-wrong


The idea of the shadow is that for people who have an invisible impairment it is hidden away, but still real and still has a disabling impact (in different ways) to the person. It is a reaction to the normal/abnormal and abled/disabled binaries that exist in our society. I have fought long and hard to be recognised as a disabled person, because to the world i look "normal". 


It also ironically, seems to play into the gender binary of society. However, this is actually a clever reaction to societies definition. My initial reasoning for using the male female toilet symbol is a simple one. It is toilets. Disability is often portrayed as the third gender of the toilet world, with male, female and disabled being the options. You can't be more than one, you have to chose. The male/female symbol is as instantly recognisable as the disabled person symbol. Its why i picked it. It is a sad reflection of our society that these exist, but i decided to keep it simple and easily recognisable. It made a statement about gender, but one that is that gender considerations are so often omitted from disability (perhaps a skirt would get caught in the wheels?) and not intended to exclude differently gendered people from the equation. In fact it was trying to include more genders than the wheelchair symbol which in itself is pretty genderless.


I didn't want to make too many statements with the design. I wanted to keep it simple. If i were to design something around intersectionality i wouldnt just include gender, but race, religion and other aspects of a persons identity that can intersect with disability (answers on a postcard as to how i can do that). 


It has been sucessful, because as i said i see it used everywhere. I don't have any control over its usage because i wanted to give it freedom to become whatever it was needed to be. I kept quiet about creating it because i dont think it should be owned, apart from by the person who uses it and interprets its meaning in their own way to help them explain their identity.
I can see how it can be interpreted as an attack on different genders though and i apolgise, it was merely meant as an attack on the symbolism of disability.


From a disabled person.

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