LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey
LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey
LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey
LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey
LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey

LOOKING FOR ALICE by Siân Davey

Regular price £35.00 Sale

ISBN: 978-1-907112-52-2
Publication Date: Dec 2015
Binding: Hardback, cloth-covered
Pages: 104
Format: 220x260 mm
Designer: Emma Scott-Child

Chosen as Sean O’Hagan’s Best Books of The Year 2015

Looking For Alice is an award-winning project by British photographer Siân Davey, which tells the story of her daughter Alice and their family. Alice was born with Down’s Syndrome, but is no different to any other little girl or indeed human being. She feels what we all feel. Their family is also like many other families, and Si ân’s portraits of Alice and their daily life are both intimate and familiar. “My family is a microcosm for the dynamics occurring in many other families. Previously as a psychotherapist I have listened to many stories and it is interesting that what has been revealed to me, after fifteen years of practice, is not how different we are to one another, but rather how alike we are as people. It is what we share that is significant. The stories vary but we all experience similar emotions.”

However despite the normality, the underlying fact is that society does not acknowledge Alice as such, and her very existence was given little or no value. She entered a world where routine genetic screening at twelve weeks gestation is thrust towards birth prevention rather than birth preparation. Indeed, prior to the introduction of screening, children such as Alice would have been severely marginalised and ultimately institutionalised and given little or limited medical care.

Their journey as mother and daughter was not an instantly smooth and happy one either: “I was deeply shocked when Alice was born as an ‘imperfect’ baby. I was fraught with anxiety that rippled through to every aspect of my relationship with her. My anxieties penetrated my dreams. On reflection I saw that Alice was feeling my rejection of her and that caused me further pain. I saw that the responsibility lay with me; I had to dig deep into my own prejudices and shine a light on them. The result was that as my fear dissolved I fell in love with my daughter. We all did.”