The work produced by Zoe Johnson is to make people aware of the stigma surrounding mental health. Each piece of work is made to be viewed in a silent situation – making the viewers feel uncomfortable. This allows the viewer to experience how mental health sufferers feel when stigmatised. The idea of viewing the work is silence is especially important to the work. Not only does it make the viewer feel uncomfortable, but highlights the silence of the sculputres – representing how mental health sufferers often suffer in silence. Johnson, through her work, shows different ways in which people can feel when suffering from a mental illness, specifically depression.

The first stage that Johnson represents within her work is Guilt. The guilt of having a mental illness, especially if you do not have a necessarily have a reason. The flesh like colours used within the work gives a feeling of rawness, representing how mental illness can have such a painful effect on the sufferer.

The second stage represented is emptiness. This shows both the physical and emotional feeling of emptiness. There is a link within this piece of work to eating disorders, yet the feeling of loneliness is common across all mental illnesses. This stage is especially relatable to me as I suffer from social anxiety. I often feel lonely, yet because of my disorder I find it hard to socialise – creating an endless problem I cannot seem to recover from.
The third stage represented is exhaustion. Suffering from a mental illness means you can constantly feeling exhausted. It is interesting for me how only part of the body is used within this work – the rest appearing to be ‘missing’. This links with the feeling of being unable to function which is talked about in the next stage.
The fourth step is the feeling of slipping. With any mental illness you can feel as if you do not have the ability to function any longer. As the artist describes it is like coming closer to death. Every aspect of your life is effected when suffering from a mental illness, not simply your thoughts.
Finally is the idea of being pulled up – the idea of recovering. This is an important message to me to get across. The help of other people has such a massive impact on those recovering from mental illness. The work is different from the others in the project. Where the rest of the work can be seen in quite a negative way, this plays on the idea of hope at the end of a mental illness.