Tactical Bodies

  • Dates
    2024 - 2026
  • Author
  • Topics Contemporary Issues, Documentary, Fine Art, Portrait, Social Issues
  • Location Melbourne, Australia

Tactical Bodies, by Meg De Young and Gabrielle Hall-Lomax, positions self-defence as both method and critique. Through performative photography, the artists question how women are conditioned to inhabit threat, and how those patterns might be undone.

Tactical Bodies is a research-based project exploring how gendered expectations shape the ways women use their bodies. It began with shared reflections on how perceived threat influenced their movement through public spaces - affecting how they held themselves and navigated their surroundings. This awareness became a starting point for examining how these responses are conditioned and whether the body can unlearn them through self-defence practice

Using performative photography, the artists investigate how the body learns to respond to danger through repetition, rehearsal, and embodied experience. Drawing on Judith Butler’s concept of gender as repeated performance, Tactical Bodies considers how women are socialised into habits of caution and constraint - gestures that come to define femininity. The project questions how these ingrained patterns might be disrupted.


While women’s self-defence can effectively prevent violence and build confidence, it also faces criticism for being unrealistic or placing responsibility on those most at risk. Informed by manuals, training, and feminist scholarship - including Emilia Aaltonen’s critique of ‘feminine vulnerability’ and her conception of self-defence as corporeal resistance - Meg and Gabrielle stage re-enactments to explore how the body might be retrained under threat. Their rehearsals deliberately reject fixed forms, embracing contradiction. The resulting images feel simultaneously empowering, absurd, humorous, and unsettling - mirroring the tensions inherent in self-defence.

By positioning self-defence as both a conceptual framework and a practical method, Tactical Bodies challenges narratives that cast women primarily as victims. It reimagines the constraints placed upon women’s bodies - and the possibility of resisting them through deliberate, physical action.

© Meg De Young - Key as Weapon, 2026
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Key as Weapon, 2026

© Meg De Young - How to Fall, 2025
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How to Fall, 2025

© Meg De Young - The Eight Gates Theory, 2025
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The Eight Gates Theory, 2025

© Meg De Young - Practicing Kicking, 2026
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Practicing Kicking, 2026

© Meg De Young - Hair Grab, 2025
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Hair Grab, 2025

© Meg De Young - Finger Break, 2025
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Finger Break, 2025

© Meg De Young - Strike Points, 2025
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Strike Points, 2025

© Meg De Young - Book as Weapon, 2025
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Book as Weapon, 2025

© Meg De Young - Grab from Behind, 2025
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Grab from Behind, 2025

© Meg De Young - Finger Pull, 2026
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Finger Pull, 2026

© Meg De Young - Leg Beater, 2025
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Leg Beater, 2025

© Meg De Young - Skin Pinch, 2026
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Skin Pinch, 2026

© Meg De Young - Baseball Bat as Weapon, 2026
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Baseball Bat as Weapon, 2026

© Meg De Young - Practicing Eye-Gouging, 2026
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Practicing Eye-Gouging, 2026

© Meg De Young - Using a Weapon, 2026
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Using a Weapon, 2026

© Meg De Young - Eye Gouge, 2025
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Eye Gouge, 2025

© Meg De Young - Ground Defense 2026
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Ground Defense 2026

© Meg De Young - Knife as Weapon, 2026
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Knife as Weapon, 2026

© Meg De Young - Intertwined, 2025
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Intertwined, 2025

© Meg De Young - Controlling the Attacker, 2025
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Controlling the Attacker, 2025