The women in these paintings are not unattractive and indeed maintain, to some degree, the gender and body-type expectations we're accustomed to seeing. Pushing against the Jerry Seinfelds, I wonder if Witt has considered painting differently-abled bodies in her work. This is something that I try (sometimes failing – remarkably failing) to be cognitive of, because if we're not challenging representational norms with inclusivity now, then when will we? "Ableism is defined in disability studies as discrimination in favour of able-bodied people. The ableist views able bodies as the norm in society, implying that people who have disabled bodies must strive to become that norm" (Watson). Bringing these ideas into popular culture Bueva is thinking similarly about the embodiment of women's sexuality, "Blatant sexualization of the media along with commodification and normalization of erotic imagery in public discourse further problematize issues of disabled visibility, implicitly resulting in female disabled bodies' symbolic oscillation between exclusion and "enfreakment". Traditionally viewed as not ideal reproducers or embodiment of desirable or even acceptable femininity, women with disabilities' sexuality is either marginalized and excluded as unacceptable and deviant or fetishized and incorporated into the booming and rapidly expanding representational idiom of pornography" (Bueva 9).
While the body is prominent and was the starting point for this series, Witt tells me that she has increasingly been thinking about architecture and interiors. Contemplating how different spaces function and how they do so across gender, race and class, she seems more critical of the spaces we find ourselves. I Only Decorate with Satire is a work-in-progress, of Alana in her bedroom, naked of course, tugging to pull the top right corner of the fitted sheet over the mattress. This painting, unlike the earlier ones, has muted grays, blues and reds and in contrast to the others, there reads a heaviness to it. Immediately the colours help to convey something unnerving – it's America-praising in a hate propaganda way. The dirty and mangled American flag that flanks the wall, and the framed newspaper headline that reads, "JAMMED PRISONS BREED PERVERTS", doesn't taste of irony. This friend seems to fulfil Witt's inquiry into how the materials we keep in our spaces can either reveal or betray our own beliefs, and how the objects she paints with a person provides them with a new agency. I believe her when she tells me her Calgary-based high school classmate, who works in prison reform, is not who the objects imply she is. This still doesn't sit right with me and as the viewer, I appreciate being pushed.