Ariana Page Russell Turns Her Skin Condition Into Art

We sat down with the artist to discuss beauty, the body as a canvas, and why some skin issues shouldn’t just be something only dermatologists see.

Ariana Page Russell
Turning a Skin Condition Into Body Art

Beauty is especially skin deep if you’re artist Ariana Page Russell. She has dermatographia, a condition in which lightly scratching your skin causes raised, red lines where you've scratched. It affects roughly 5 percent of the population, but Ms. Russell is the only one who has turned her puffy, ruddy, sensitive skin into elaborately patterned high art.

In her latest show, “Blouse,” which is currently hanging at the Magnan Metz Gallery in New York City, she created photographs, video art, and temporary tattoos using images of her rosy body designs to make a powerful and prideful statement about being comfortable within one’s own skin. She turns her body into a canvas at her studio in Brooklyn and that’s where we caught up with the blonde haired, blue eyed, artful ambassador of blushing.

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YB: When did you first realize you had this condition, dermatographia?

APR: I don’t really know, maybe some time in high school or college. A lot of times, people don’t develop it until they’re a little older. I think I also didn’t realize that I had it because to me, it just seemed sort of normal except for when people started to be like “Whoa! What’s going on? What happened?” And then, I became more aware of it.

YB: Did you try to hide it at first?

APR: No. I mean, there’s not really a way to hide it. It would just kind of happen on accident and I had no control over it.

 YB: What’s the amount of pressure you have to apply to get your skin to puff?

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APR: I just use a knitting needle. I can just go like this. (She draws a few lines on her arm.) It’s not much pressure at all. That’s all I have to do.

YB: And that will leave a mark, huh. Is it instantaneous?

APR: It takes a few minutes, you’ll see it start to come up. What I use is this (She pulls out thin cardboard with sail shapes cut out.) And I just went and traced it. See, I can’t see what I’m doing because see I just did it (She points to the lines she made on her arms. They are still not visible.) and I can’t see it because it takes like five minutes to show up. So I can’t tell where I’ve been drawing. If I need a particular pattern, then I have to do a template or stencil.  I just put up a video on Vimeo. I made a smaller template [of the sail design] and sped up the video so you could see the pattern go up and down [on my skin]. So you can see it happen.

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