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Lisa Sorgini, In-Passing. A rumination on loss, life, and motherhood.
In-Passing began in 2015, the year Lisa Sorgini (b. 1980, Australian) became a mother to her first child, shortly followed by the loss of her mother to illness.
Two new identities: Mother and Motherless. The collision of birth and death marks the inception of what has become a long-running commentary, nearly a decade in the making.
Initially, the creation of images served as both a determined witness to a new reality and a therapeutic outlet for her grief and awe. The images are saturated with the profound metamorphosis that accompanies motherhood, representing the corporeal and psychological shifts that redefine the self. Reminiscent of the adolescent journey, this evolution of identity navigates a liminal space where the maternal self simultaneously vanishes and is reborn—a quiet reinvention at the threshold of both loss and renewal.
In its most apparent form, it is a visceral account of the chaos and intimacy within the familial space during her children’s formative years. Each image speaks to the complexities, intimacy, and emotional landscapes of the mother-child universe.
Beyond this, there lies the pursuit of something more elusive—an intangible force that lingers at the periphery of memory and consciousness. It embodies the unspoken weight of motherhood, shaping each experience in ways that are deeply felt but not always easily understood.




