“I believe sex should be free, but it doesn't mean you can't
accessorise.”
Samantha Roddick
Samantha Roddick
In 2013 The European
Union banned the sale of sale of cosmetic products and
ingredients that have been tested on animals. It was a campaign started
by the owner of the world wide chain of cosmetic stores The Body Shop, Anita
Roddick in 1996. Whilst she didn’t live to see the culmination of her activism
her daughter Samantha
Roddick did. About the EU’s decision the younger Roddick told London’s Telegraph
newspaper “Everyone knows my
mother as the 'queen of green’ and the doyenne of responsible business, but I
believe she’s still underestimated as a pioneer who took political campaigning
by business beyond the particular concerns of that business and mobilized her
customers to fight for change on a bigger scale.”
The younger Roddick is an apple that didn’t fall
far from that tree. Dropping out of school at 16 Roddick spent some time as an
apprentice to the Russian Orthodox painter Mara
Amats before her activist genes kicked in. For the next six years Roddick
traveled the world espousing causes concerned with the deforestation of the
Amazon and the rights of indigenous people. Along the way she also taught art
in a Vancouver school and created the youth magazine Cockroach.
In the mid 1990’s, after reading the book A History of Whores Roddick embraced
sexual politics and in the first year of the new century she opened Coco Der
Mer, taking retail erotica from the back streets to the high street of London,
New York and Los Angeles. Adopting the business principles of her mother
Roddick’s sexual emporium had an ethical ethos that underpinned its operation.
As she explained to the Guardian
newspaper’s Hannah Pool “There is only one rule within sex, and that rule is
simple: consent. Without it, you're talking about emotional torture and
physical brutality.”
In 2011 Roddick sold
Coco Der Mer to the British sex toy retailer Lovehoney allowing her more time
to concentrate on her activism. The latest incarnation of which is the
photographic exhibition Hidden Within.
After the death of
the Italian architect Carlo Mollino a treasure
trove of over a thousand erotic Polaroid’s were found amongst his effects.
Depicting female models in seductive and submissive poses they had been accessorized
and directed to suit Mollino’s particular taste. As Roddick told How
to Spend It’s, Nicole Swengley ““Mollino’s images are very sensual, but he
objectified the women by controlling their poses… The poses are flattering to
every body type, but also very unnatural, as if he was sculpting their bodies.
And I feel this echoes our own society’s obsession with female perfectionism.”
Roddick recreated 12 of Mollino’s
photographs and combined them with the religious iconography she learned during
her apprenticeship with Mara Amats. As she
explained “I wanted to get inside Mollino’s psychology
because I feel his visual expression holds a mirror to our own cultural
attitudes to sex.”
Hidden Within is on show at London’s
Michael
Hoppen Gallery until the 1st of May.
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