Artwork Collection

ok girl. - Thesis

From eulogies to girlhood to odes to birth control, ok girl. is a collection of zines that explores femininity and the shame that perpetually permeates being a woman through deeply personal anecdotes recounted in poetry and intimate self-portraits that aren't always portraits.

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ok girl.
ok girl.

Creative Writing

ok girl.

From eulogies to girlhood to odes to birth control, "ok girl." is a collection of zines that explores femininity and the shame that perpetually permeates being a woman through deeply personal anecdotes recounted in poetry and intimate... More

perceive me
perceive me

Creative Writing

perceive me

Girl is something to be witnessed. I am girl because you say I am. What you see, or what I think you see, is what I am. "perceive me" is about expectations, appearances, and the person I become when i mentally flip my reflection in the mirror to... More

female figure
female figure

Creative Writing

female figure

Girl is something to be embodied. But girl body kinda sucks, actually. "female figure" is for the girls fed up of unexplained undiagnosed problems, the girls on birth control, the girls who are fed up with PMS, and the girls who are over it being... More

queer girl laments
queer girl laments

Creative Writing

queer girl laments

Girl is something to be loved. And I love girls. "queer girl laments" explores what being a girl who loves girls entails, from Catholic guilt and rage, to family tension they don’t even know exists, to learning that you are also a girl that can... More

eulogy to girlhood
eulogy to girlhood

Creative Writing

eulogy to girlhood

Girl is something to be mourned. "eulogy to girlhood" is exactly that: an investigation attempting to pinpoint the moment a girl dies and a woman is born in her place, examining what girl even means, and how growing up means the death of a self.

Work by

Frances Luk

Creative Writing

“From eulogies to girlhood to odes to birth control, "ok girl." is a collection of zines that explores femininity and the shame that perpetually permeates being a woman through deeply personal...” [More]