Continuing her ongoing investigations into the aesthetics of technologically enhanced human forms, Rhonda Holberton’s new series, You Are Something the Whole World is Doing, imagines the limitations of the physical body in digital space. The bodies represented in Holberton’s sculptures and videos are not like the bodies we see in movies, advertising, and video games that effortlessly navigate through groundless space. Instead, the burden of weight blankets the human form in the cast silicone sculpture, Free Fall. The video projection, The Ground was Never Stable in the First Place, depicts an exhaustive infinite landscape navigated by a fragmented body in protective gear. To Give Oneself as Thing pieces together sections of a full-body cast; the vacant exosekelten once having served to both to paralyze and to heal. Holberton’s work navigates planes of slippage between the finitude of biology, and the interminable capacity of virtualization.