If the House is Not Okay, Then I’m Not Okay sees Carpenter visualise the feeling of being overwhelmed by ‘the domestic’ and the list of chores and the mental load she takes on in her home. She reflects on gender roles and the chore-gap, drawing on instances where she has had to act as a motherly or maternal figure in her relationships instead of experiencing a shared division of labour.
Libby Carpenter
BA (Hons) Photography
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