In the Palacio de Cibeles, in Madrid, there is a naked woman. The woman is made of Carrara marble, like one of those Greek Venus in temples and textbooks. But she is a real woman. A Granada woman, artist and real. The woman is bald, her body on the edge, swollen, painful and deteriorated. There is no left breast. In its place is a scar that looks like a black hole violently absorbing an entire galaxy. The left arm floats in the air, fist up, like Tommie Smith on the podium in Mexico 68. “When I finished the hardest part of my breast cancer treatment, I asked to have a 3D cast of my body. I have not touched anything, it is what it was. I am the work.
Marina Vargas (Granada, 1980) received the news on November 18, 2019: “You have breast cancer.” She had been exhausted for a while, sleepy, but she thought it was stress from work. “You don’t think it can happen to you until it happens to you,” he says. Shortly after, the covid crept into our lives and she, like the rest, locked herself at home. «I lived the cancer confined. They operated on me in the middle of a pandemic. It was a tough process. And so, trapped between the bug outside and the bug inside, she looked for confidants in the only place that always remains: art. He met Hannah Wilke (1940–1993), an American artist who photographed the entire process of her cancer, right up to the end. «His last work was titled ‘Intravenus’. My sculpture is also named in homage to her. Ironically, ‘Intravenus’ comes from intravenous, which is where the food that the patient needs to live arrives; and Venus, the goddess of love.