The story follows Rachel, a successful businesswoman who is suspicious of her secretary, Carole. Rachel believes Carole may be leaking company secrets to competitors after discovering a coded letter. Accompanied by her roommate Amanda, Rachel follows Carole to what she expects to be a clandestine business meeting, only to discover that Carole is secretly involved in a voyeuristic group run by a mysterious man where she indulges in erotic fantasies at night.
Beaulieu utilized high-contrast film that gave his subjects an "overheated" look—vibrant reds, deep shadows, and shimmering skin tones. etranges exhibitions 2002 benjamin beaulieu hot
The 2002 exhibition generated polarized responses: The story follows Rachel, a successful businesswoman who
Beaulieu’s materials are deceptively ordinary—rubberized textiles, matte black spray, low-wattage lamps, and plexiglass panels scored with near-invisible marks. The politics emerge in the restraint: by denying spectacle he foregrounds decisions museums and galleries make about control. The plexiglass panels, when read closely, bear residue—smudges, droplets, small abrasions—traces of previous viewers. Rather than sanitizing these traces, HOT preserves and accentuates them, insisting on the gallery as lived space. That insistence becomes a provocation: who has the right to touch, to mark, to inhabit an institutional surface? Beaulieu utilized high-contrast film that gave his subjects