In Two in One, Devra Fox presents a new body of graphite drawings that entwine human and plant forms to explore connection, transformation, and embodiment. Drawing on her own experience of pregnancy and motherhood, Fox reflects on matrescence as a doubling of self—a state of simultaneity in which one becomes two. Her works suggest that no life—human or botanical—exists in isolation, but rather as part of a continuous cycle of reproduction, separation, and renewal.
Through delicate yet deliberate mark-making, Fox renders anthropomorphic plants that mirror the human condition: veins resemble branches, petals unfurl with quiet intensity, and bodies seem to root into one another. These drawings invite viewers into an intimate meditation on growth, vulnerability, and interdependence, situating personal experience within universal natural processes.