Miami-based
performance artist Orestes de la Paz has put his heart, soul and fat
into 20 bars of special soap made with his liposuctioned blubber. The
bars of human soap are available for purchase and priced at $1,000.
Orestes
de la Paz underwent a liposuction procedure in December of last year,
and decided to turn the removed fat into soap to prevent it from going
rancid. He came up with the idea for his art thesis after realizing
that “clients are willing to try anything to feel and look beautiful,
even to the extent of buying products with human elements in them (stem
cells, placenta, semen; you name it, it’s out there.)” Working as a
hairstylist and make-up artist, Orestes loves combining the worlds of
art and beauty together, so the unusual project sort of made sense to
him. Apart from coconut oil, organic vegetable shortening, lavender and
tree tea oils, as well as other cosmetics ingredients, his unique soap
bars are 25% human fat, which apparently leaves the user’s hands soft
after washing. “There’s always a certain amount of blood, sweat, and
tears that goes into any artwork. I just make it more explicit,” the
artist said about his bizarre project.
When
he first got the idea to use fat from his liposuction in an art piece,
he was going to turn into some kind of acrylic memoir, but his doctor
told him that in order to keep it he would have to convert the blubber
into something else. That’s when all the extensive biology classes he
took during college finally came in handy – he remembered soap is made
with fat. “There’s something about converting the notions about how we
approach fat that can sometimes be seen as dirty or repulsive … Being
able to convert it into something that is cleansing and also potentially
healing reflects off of the phrase ‘Cleanliness is next to godliness.’
Cleaning the outside with stuff from the inside. Converting something
that was dirty and putting it into something that was clean, and then
putting that thing that I saw as dirty onto my body and reclaiming what I
was ashamed of before, ” de la Paz told the Miami New Times.
“Making
Soap”, Orestes’ art thesis, is currently displayed at Miami’s Frost
Museum, where attendees can actually wash their hands with his
lipo-soap. ”The museum-goers were so at ease, that the idea of the soap
being from human fat escaped their minds and they simply enjoyed the
soap for it’s lavender, tree tree scent and the way it left the hands
soft after washing,” the artist told HuffPost Miami. ”Those brave enough
to wash ended up inspiring others to simply to try a good product. No
one seemed disgusted by the soap demo even after having watched the
video in the gallery.”
People
interested in this organic human fat soap can buy a bar for $1,000, but
he has extended a special invitation to the all-thing-weird lover we
all know as Lady Gaga. “I challenge @ladygaga to try my human fat soap.
You down, homie?” Orestes de la Paz wrote on Twitter.
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