![]() "Canker" will be performed at 5pm tomorrow at the Blue Oyster Project Art Space. "But I'll have a hammer on hand, in case it's physically impossible to get out." I did a practice run for two hours last month and my tongue swelled up and I couldn't talk properly for days," she said. The what, to me, is just as impressive and fascinating as the how. I'll get lockjaw and cramps and sugar rushes. When people talk about Escape From Tomorrow, a movie filmed in Disney World without Disneys permission, all they ever seem to focus on is the development side of it.While it is an impressive accomplishment in guerrilla filmmaking, I feel that the film itself deserves more attention. I've also got a bit of a sweet tooth, but I probably won't any more after this," she joked. "And I have an oral fascination the mouth is the site of sensuality and aggression and communication. The project had bittersweet undertones, she said. ![]() I don't expect people to stay the whole three hours it will take." It will be demanding for me and the viewer. "My plan is to lick around and see which bit gives the most. I'll be nude in the box, so I'm going to be a bit sticky by the time I get out of it," she said, while boiling toffee for her sculpture at the Otago Polytechnic School of Hospitality this week. ![]() ![]() "I'll build myself into it then lick my way out over three hours. Just ask Christchurch artist Audrey Baldwin, who will attempt to lick her way out of a box made of toffee tomorrow in her Fringe Festival performance, "Canker".Ä«aldwin has made a dodecahedron out of 1m square by 4mm thick panes of pure toffee, each weighing about 8kg. Photo by Stephen Jaquiery.Artistic taste is a funny thing. Christchurch artist Audrey Baldwin yesterday stands behind one of the panes of toffee that will be part of her Fringe Festival performance, "Canker", at the Blue Oyster Project Art Space tomorrow. ![]()
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