Hart describes how she was told she experienced "heteronormative sexual training from a really early age", through multiple intersex medical interventions. Despite giving consent as a child, she felt unaware of the lifelong implications.[3] Hart describes how stigma "sets the scene" for such interventions, "There’s a fear that people will be maladjusted because their bodies are different, and that fear teamed with the ignorance of the realities of what it’s like to live as an adult with those bodies without surgery, kind of perpetuates a surgical intervention process".[1] Growing up, Hart did not know that her sister, Phoebe Hart, also had androgen insensitivity syndrome.[4]
Career
Hart is a "high-energy avant-garde performer" and multidisciplinary artist, assembling digital and analog filmmaking, music, and visual art.[5] She is a cofounder of Venting Gallery and the Foundation for Contemporary Music and Culture[6] in Brisbane, Queensland, and performs with bands including X-wave and the Unaustralians.[5][7] In the autobiographical documentary Orchids, My Intersex Adventure, Hart and her sister face the traumatic emotional scars from early operations and the secrecy associated with them.[8][9]