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I <3 Boys explores feminized adolescence and coming of age alongside the internet of the early 2000’s. Through large format weavings and experimental video, I <3 Boys becomes a tangible dreamscape that allows for refuge between the screen and reality. Navigating through screen names and avatars, Mallers, Seto and g, work collectively to reflect on the development of selfhood through the digital noise and maximalism of the media landscape that shaped them. Raised to value oneself in relation to the male gaze, they processed their socialization as “girls” by conditioning themselves to believe that they too were programmed to exist for the pleasure of men.
This work of this exhibition explores the consequential sentiment that if one does not meet the physical and behavioral attributes deemed desirable, they are, by default, a glitch. By employing glitch, an inherent flaw, in conversation with hyper feminine aesthetics, these artists raise questions about the intended functionality of gender and sexuality within society.

Maeve Mallers is a recent SAIC graduate, creating work influenced by their experience growing up online in the 2000s. Through mixed media fiber arts, coding, and video, they create hyper-intense works that mirror the maximalist chaos of 2000s consumerist pop culture. Their digital pieces, such as videos and websites, emphasize the encouragement to disconnect from reality and opt for fantasy. Their physical pieces exist as tangible portals into the digital fantasy.


Madeline Seto dissects the soft power of the high feminine, like a cake taken apart layer by layer. Through the mediums of fiber, food, and performance, she soaks her work with sweetness through the visual language of pastels, lace, flowers, bunnies, and frosting. She draws influence from the American 1960s, internet subculture and phenomena, anime, East Asian cute culture, Chinese traditional medicine, fermentation, and ASMR baking YouTubers. Scraping away the sugary plastic coating of the Capitalocene, she reveals the cavity which it creates - the rotting of body and mind. Madeline reassembles these layers in a mutated confection, creating a sweetness not safe for consumption.


Alexa g is currently working with digital mediums to explore their relationship to their adolescence. Using tools like photoshop and the tc-2 jacquard loom they are creating physical pieces of childhood ephemera. Through their idolization of stars like Amy Winehouse and One Direction, they explore their own thought processes around the way the media not only treats these stars but how they treat young women. Growing up in a Baptist household while also questioning their own queerness Alexa g treated the internet as their only safe space. It is where they became familiar with discourses around feminism, white Christian colonialism and gender identity. Growing up alongside the internet, Ag poured over the cultures they were strictly kept from, combing through Twitter and Tumblr to find refuge away from a devotion that imposed a deep shame of self. The online communities they had access to allowed them to celebrate the female form and one’s innate sexuality in a way their home shamed them from doing. Alexa g weaves as a process of examining and continuing this reclamation; reclamation of body and of the guilt imposed upon them.