photo © Sílvia Ferreira, Maria Inês Lourenço
poster © Inês Paiva
Mindful Image and Unique Beauty is a chamber music project that combines new composed music with visual art. The concerts are defined as live exhibitions where the audience sits amongst the art and the musicians, blurring the boundary between artist and audience.
The project involves exclusively female artists from all over the world: four female composers from Sweden, Germany and Chile, four female musicians from Germany, Portugal, Spain and Norway, and two female visual artists from Portugal. This project thus offers the opportunity for intercultural and interdisciplinary collaboration.
The outstanding feature of this project is the world premiere of newly composed music by women. In the context of the overarching theme of beauty, a focus will be placed on female appearance and the problems associated with it.
The poem “Mirror” by Sylvia Plath is used as a source of inspiration for the newly written music and the art pieces, conveying the definition of reflection which is directly connected to the overall theme of the project.
The project presents beauty as an individual asset, regardless of age, weight, origin, hair, and skin colour. We want to encourage women to reflect on their own interpretation of beauty, to accept themselves more and to be less influenced by the beauty ideals of our time. We see the aim of the project as sharpening women's awareness of their own individual beauty, which is defined completely independently of what the consumer society and transient aesthetics dictate to us. We also hope to attract attention with our project and inspire other artists to create similar projects.
The premiere will take place on June 7th and 8th, 2025 at the Inter-Arts Center (Black Room) in Malmö, Sweden.
We plan on releasing an album around November 2025 with all the compositions that will be premiered on these dates. Further concerts in other European countries are planned for the end of 2025 and 2026.
One of the outstanding features of this project is the multicultural and interdisciplinary collaboration. Within the classic music setting it is very difficult to find these kinds of collaborations between different art forms. This setting allows the audience to have a bigger and more profound sensory experience when attending the concert. It is a wonderful opportunity for both the international and Swedish local community to experience this artistic vision within Malmö's cultural environment, also motivating other artists to get involved in similar projects and collaborations.
Besides these aspects, it is also important to describe the aim of the project in a general sense. It is significant for our project to educate and create awareness surrounding image and beauty, subsequently reaching every woman out there who does not identify with societal standards and every woman who has been made to believe that this perfection is the one perfection every woman should aim for.
Beauty has been described through centuries of art form, mainly rooted in the male perspective, however it seems imprudent to consider history through a biased lens. These concepts concern everyone, and as part of a capitalist society it feels imperative to address these aspects that, though seemingly insignificant, still represent a huge role nowadays. Linking music with art and literature makes reaching all genders in this battle against stereotypes possible, normalizing aging as a natural and beautiful process. Because, in the end, beauty and image might indeed be connected, but it is the uniqueness of one self that truly matters.
"Now I am a lake. A woman bends over me,
Searching my reaches for what she really is."
Excerpt from Mirror by Sylvia Plath
Mindful Image project and Unique Beauty is guided by the poem Mirror, by Sylvia Plath, from which Maria Inês Lourenço and Sílvia Ferreira begin their plastic exploration, combining it with the lenços dos namorados (sweetheart handkerchiefs). The choice to represent the idea of the lenços dos namorados is not random. This traditionally portuguese handkerchief originated in the 18th century in the Minho region, in northern Portugal. These handkerchiefs were crafted by young portuguese women of “marriageable age”, who embroidered their favorite motifs onto a linen square. Originally, they were worn during Sunday strolls, but their main purpose was to conquer the man they loved. Over time, the inclusion of written messages became common, allowing women to dedicate poems to their beloved. This writing was often phonetically transcribed as they spoke, reflecting the educational poverty of the time – many women were unable to continue their studies due to their gender. If the young man accepted the invitation of love, he would wear the handkerchief in his coat pocket or around his neck. Behind this simple love handkerchief lies deep social pain, including the pressure on women to belong to a man and to cease being a financial burden to their families.
Uneducated women, seeking a “owner” to ensure their survival, would pour their talents into embroidery, demonstrating their domestic skills in hopes of being chosen as a useful wife for the household. In this project, the artists work with used bedsheets, printing images inspired by the lenços dos namorados through water washes and stamping techniques, emphasizing the domestic role historically assigned to women. The artists intertwine the poem with the bedsheets by incorporating handwritten excerpts. However, due to the unpredictability of water, the text dissolves, leaving behind only the idea of the poem. This fading reflects how, like the mirror in Plath’s poem, the women who embroidered these handkerchiefs accepted the partner who appeared before them—just as the woman in the mirror accepts the image she reflects – without choice or agency. During the performance, the pieces – created in pairs that mirror each other – will be displayed hanging around the audience in a way that evokes a clothesline. This installation creates an atmosphere resembling the center of a clearing, symbolizing the reflective universe of the poem. Thus, the viewer finds themselves between the reflected and the reflection, occupying the intermediate space – a limbo between what is, what was, and what could be.
text and photos © Sílvia Ferreira, Maria Inês Lourenço