![]() “Visual artist Cassils uses bodybuilding and boxing to empower and enlighten,” The Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, Australia), 18 January 2019. “Cassils on using their body as artwork to fight for transgender rights on The Hub on Art - ABC RN,” ABC (Australia), February 5, 2019. “CASSILS,” VAULT Magazine, Issue 25, Feb 7, 2019. “Alchemic by Cassils, PICA,” Visual Arts Hub, Feb 12, 2019. “Perth Festival: The Joy of Breaking Out While Looking In,” The Australian (Australia), Feb 13, 2019. “Cassils: Alchemic,” Art Guide Australia, March 15, 2019. "Dark Mofo 2019: Cassils' performance to deliver a firey opening for A Forest," The Advertiser (Adelaide, Australia), J“Dark Mofo works to watch out for," Financial Review (Sydney, Australia), June 7, 2019. "Artist's Performance is on fire - literally," Mercury (Hobart, Australia), June 11, 2019. “Dark Mofo: A Forest opens with artist melting ice with body heat," NT News (Northern Territory, Australia), June 11, 2019. "Dark Mofo pushes trauma boundaries with self-immolation and VR violence," Syndey Morning Herald (Sydney, UK), June 16, 2019. "Inflatable penises, latex pigs and a Justin Bieber shrine: Dark Mofo's wildest rides," The Guardian (London, UK), June 19, 2019. “Wellcome Collection to open new permanent gallery,” Fad Magazine, July 22, 2019. “You Can Call Me Sir Honors the Lineage of Female Sex Work,” Paper Magazine, July 22, 2019. “Major photography exhibition to spark conversations surrounding our understanding of masculinity,” Creative Boom, November 06, 2019. “12 queer artists whose work is making us pay attenttion,” NBC NEWS, December 13, 2019. ![]() “The 20 most read visual storied of 2019,” ArtsHub, December 23, 2019. “ Masculinities: Liberation Through Photography review,” Time Out, February 18, 2020. “Photos that explore the male body beyond the perfectly sculpted ideal,” i-D, February 25, 2020. “Performance artist Cassils explores trans visibility through performance with clay,” The Globe and Mail, February 21, 2020. “Cassils turns the act of looking at trans bodies into performance: While suspended from a harness in a Plexiglas box, the Montreal artist made a big impression – and a mess – at the Gardiner Museum,” Now Toronto, March 2, 2020. ![]()
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