Archive for the ‘queer art’ Category

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We See You John Parot

April 9, 2010

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John Parot once introduced himself to me at the MCA. It was one of the first weekends for the museum’s Andy Warhol exhibit, the BF and I walked in and John came right up to us, said he was Chicago’s foremost expert on Warhol history, and proceeded to walk us through the gallery. His humor, energy and sassy arrogance notwithstading, the funny part was that he and I had already met, several times, he’d just forgotten. He’s the kind of gay a little oblivious to his surroundings that’s constantly creating outlandish scenarios in his head while others are talking, and then interjecting said unrelated scenario into the conversation, inevitably leading to uproarious group laughter.

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*From John Parot’s Soft Prison

I’d be less willing to dish personal deets about a former-Chicagoan (now LA) and cutie artist friend, but he’s been holed up in nowhere land and the reason has finally surfaced. He’ll be a contestant on Bravo’s new reality show “Work of Art.” From the website: “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist will bring together fourteen aspiring artists to compete for a solo show at a nationally recognized museum and a generous cash prize. In each episode, contestants are faced with the challenge of creating unique pieces in a variety of mediums such as painting, sculpture, photography, collage and industrial design. Completed works of art will be appraised by our panel of top art world figures alongside a new celebrated guest judge every week.”

Sooooooo I’m thinking John could take over. He always did.

Below, John made the animations for Logan Lynn‘s music video to “Bottom Your Way to the Top,” filmed at Chicago’s Touche.

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Tim Miller’s Lay of the Land

March 18, 2010

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Chicago is blessed to have the attention of  Tim Miller, a California-based performance artist whose level of engagement with social justice is admirable, to say the least. Regularly performing here and mentoring Chicago youth, I’ve been lucky to catch his last few pieces. While their format has always been the same, the attention grabbing manner in which Miller weaves personal anecdotes into intelligent analysis of current events is unique. He’s reliably dressed in a black tank top and shorts and uses props, eye contact, movement and metaphor to draw a thick line between what he does and simple stand up. His recent work has focused on gay marriage–a long term relationship with Australian author Alistair McCartney has obviously brought the issue to a boiling point, and the high energy, spittling politico’s want for equality has translated into the frustrated patriotism of “Lay of the Land,” playing through Sunday at Victory Garden’s Biograph Theatre, 2433 N. Lincoln Ave.

Make no mistake, Miller has fought tooth and nail for his (and our) rights. A long history with civil disobedience and “the process,” his experience gives a heavy weight to his insistence. My personal extra-lefty circles have never embraced gay marriage as their front-and-center cause, using phrases such as “post-queer” to summarize their distance between their radical justice efforts and those LGBT’s that have marriage equality as their activist priority. From where I’m standing, all of our efforts to increase visibility and legal inclusion (whether it’s marriage, health care or immigration reform) are interconnected. The thought of having one without the others is unacceptable. Miller’s generation (he’s in his early 50′s) and wish to have his partner’s residency solidified is a perfect example of how gay marriage and immigration reform are connected. It’s not the entire picture, but it is more than an adequate frame for his inspiring stories.

“Lay of the Land” starts with a detailed account of literally trying to get some sunshine up his ass, then transitions to a childhood choking incident with a potential kitchen-table tracheotomy and continues expanding its radius until we are flying over the United States with Miller flamboyantly flapping his arms across the stage. There’s video, song, and enough autobiography to feel as though you’ve gotten to know someone. A gifted story teller by nature, LOTL’s power lies in Miller’s willingness to show himself–more than once the performer drops, and emotional swell flash-floods his eyes. In that moment, the walls drop and overwhelmed is the room with an intimacy that can only clue us to the love Miller feels for his partner and his country. That reconciliation is something we are left longing for, regardless of whether or not we want gay marriage as part of our personal story.

Through Sunday in the Richard Christiansen Theater at the Biograph, 2433 N. Lincoln Ave.; Running time: 1 hour, 20 minutes; Tickets: $25 at 773-871-3000 and www.victorygardens.org

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Share Your Secular Story

February 22, 2010

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Nonprophet Status is a new  blog dedicated to creating  community within secular activists, and it’s coming out swinging with its first contest, “Share Your Secular Story”. I am one of the judges, and am really excited! You are cordially invited to share an anecdote, journey or example of a time when being a non-believer resulted in a positive experience. Whether it’s rooted in your career, your art, or your home life, the constant bombardment of religious holidays and well-intentioned seasonal tidings means that we non-religious are constantly having to deal with religion. There MUST be some good stories born out of that.

Since becoming acquainted with Humanism and its role in interfaith work, I’ve acknowledged that political peace and common understanding is more possible when it includes an effort to organize non-believers. It wasn’t a completely natural conclusion to make–most non-religious people only take swipes at people of faith, with a default argument that religious institutions have embedded war, discrimination and isolation into our culture. There is ample horrific evidence that you can point to and say, “XX religion caused XX war, or XX deaths;” arguments  I would be not be able to disprove. However, what’s important about Nonprophet’s general point of view and this contest in specific, is that looking at the religious as the enemy does absolutely nothing. It doesn’t help anything to simply identify the negative and try and keep away from it. If anything, isolating ourselves from the reality that the world and the United States are driven by politically powerful varieties of faith is complacent. It’s a resignation to being a voiceless minority, and what progress could that possibly result in? I’ve met so many artists, activists and community organizers through Think Pink Radio and would never expect any of them to be content with being a voiceless minority. The thought of that is laughable, actually. Queer people in particular tend to be without faith and also have powerful stories of communication and triumph.

“Share Your Secular Story” is a contest that I believe will add to political progress. Whether we want it or not, non-believers have a lot in common, and it doesn’t all have to revolve around how much we hate religion. There are three categories for stories: youth, for submissions by individuals 25 years of age and under, interfaith, this category is for stories about engaging with religious people in a way that is positive and/or collaborative and finally moral imagination, this category is for stories about how secular values have motivated you toward social justice / civic engagement work, or just about values you hold as secularist. Prizes include signed books, DVD’s and a publication of your work in established online publications. For all the details, see the contest page, and spread the word through your facebook!

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Why Do We Care About Fashion?

February 11, 2010

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Literally, I had just joined Gilt Groupe (thanks Harrison Cheairs) and not a few minutes later I get an email saying Alexander McQueen killed himself. Bryant Park is happening RIGHT NOW, and Mcqueen was about to unveil his newest collection in Paris. Full disclosure: I’m not a label whore, I normally wear the same pants every day and probably only have a few concert T’s in rotation in any given month. However, I do watch Project Runway and will critique someone’s look at a party, if indeed someone is trying to rock a look. But why? Why do I, and a lot of other people fucking care about fashion?

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The Onion A.V. Club had a great interview with Parker Posey the other week, and they asked her about fashion. She said, “…fashion is very popular now. Really overly popular. It’s like New Age music in the ’80s, or art. And then independent film. Now everyone’s a fashion designer. It’s had a big effect in New York, in our culture. I was just doing an interview with a girl who’s 25, and she says that everyone she knows is a fashion designer. She’s like, “Where do you get your clothes?” Why do they ask that? Everyone’s asking that. You go to these things and people always want to know what you’re wearing, instead of what you’re reading, or what you’re thinking.” I couldn’t agree more with Posey — it’s a trend, most ”designers” are talentless and her experience is the result of vapid people having nothing to talk about. The fashion industry is one of the major sources of low self-esteem, the only reason sweat shops exist, and probably the biggest cause of general preoccupation with aesthetics over larger world issues–I love that jacket but what about Haiti?

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This is a time when you can totally throw a cliché on the table and avoid silent grumbles: “Fashion is art.” Or rather, it can be. I don’t see art at the stores I shop at or at the bars I go to – functional cloth is indispensible and most people just try to be comfortable. But when you dig a little into all the fuss, the moments of heightened expression that are rare in all forms of art can be found in fashion. Chances are, when you find that moment on a runway, you are looking at something designed by Alexander McQueen. His fashions aren’t clothes. They are glimpses into dreams — they can terrify or comfort and succeed in transporting you to another time and place without being a costume. BUT it wouldn’t be you dressed as someone else or teleporting to another era or planet. No, trying to do that with a McQueen design would be like throwing a dour smirk and thinking “I’m the Mona Lisa.” His collections embody the mood of an artist, and each one was a gallery opening. Alexander McQueen’s work is why we care about fashion because it’s not about what we’re wearing, it’s about what we’re feeling. His death has not yet been absorbed, by the industry or history.

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Dragulated

February 9, 2010

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Hey guys, sorry I’ve been sick and got the winter blues. I’ve been passing the time with the new season of Rupaul’s Drag Race, and have been dragulating all of my friends. Try it!

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12/09 Critical Fierceness Grant Awardees

January 28, 2010

The awardees for the recent cycle of the Critical Fierceness grant have been announced, and quite immediately an inspired pause overtook TPR headquarters. Riva Lehrer’s cerebral process translates fully into her work–her portraits are usually the result of interviews with her subjects or deep introspection. A focus on the body and its changes in physical ability give way to an examination of limitations and empowerment presented as a see-through mirror; these drawings are as much reflection as projection. Of the two awardees, Edie Fake has been featured on TPR before – his blunt palette is far more nuanced than his primary school style suggests–the ideas are declarative, if not quite shocking. I’m excited about his map of Chicago, surely it’ll have its fair share of judgemental humor, chunky psychedelia and gay-as-fuck camaraderie.

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*Edie Fake – Fists of Fury

Grant Winner: Edie Fake

Proposed Project:  An experimental map of queer Chicago history (Illustrated Scroll)

Edie Fake’s ambitious, amorous project, is to research, design and print a conceptual
queer heritage “map” specific to Chicago, taking the form of a long scroll-like drawing of imagery and notes.
Some of Edie’s previous drawing work can be found at your local underground comic store, where his comic series
Gaylord Phoenix continues to win hearts and minds across the U.S. http://ediefake.com/

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*Riva Lehrer – Zora: How I Understand

Grant Winner: Riva Lehrer

Proposed Project: A portrait of Alison Bechdel for Lehrer’s series, “Totems and Familiars” (Large-Scale Charcoal Drawing)

Riva Lehrer’s recent series, Totems and Familiars, explores how people use metaphors to transcend their own limitations
and re-imagine the self. Her paintings and drawings often focuses on subjects who, like herself, take a claim to both
queer and disabled communities, radicalizing the notion of which bodies are seen. Riva will complete a portrait of
queer graphic novelist Alison Bechdel (Dykes to Watch Out For, Funhome) for this series. http://rivalehrer.com/

About the Critical Fierceness Grant:

Since its founding in 2005, Chances Dances has sought to create a safe space for all gender expressions by bringing together the varied LGBTIQ communities of Chicago. The creation of the Critical Fierceness grant expands upon this goal
by offering a unique opportunity for queer artistic expression. Chicago-based individuals or groups who wish to utilize
the Critical Fierceness Grant for artistic purposes and who identify themselves or their work as queer are encouraged
to apply. Critical Fierceness supports queer artists with financial assistance of up to $500. Chances Dances is proud
to provide the Critical Fierceness Grant as an opportunity for personal exploration, community development and
radical change through art. Our next deadline is June 30th.

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How Fucking Romantic

January 26, 2010

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*1st Panel of “I Don’t Believe In The Sun” by Huw “Lem” Davies

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*”I Think I Need A New Heart” by Mark Gamble

I’m literally jumping out of my space-heater safety zone with this link. How Fucking Romantic is a blog that collects writers and comic artists to illustrate each of the songs on The Magnetic Fields’s 69 Love Songs. Must be Magnetic Fields day! It’s looking like the project has only been going on since April 2009, but 2/3rds of Stephin Merritt’s magnum opus has already been claimed. If you are a visual artist and want to contribute, go and leave a comment (there is a degree of squirelliness about their contact information). This blog gets the TOO FUCKING CUTE stamp from TPR.

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Les Ballets Trockadero De Monte Carlo

January 22, 2010

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If you’d have asked me the year 2000 how often I’d be going to The Ballet in 2009, I would have told you to step off my combat boots, dude. Thankfully, my better half has schooled me in the ways of performance, and I can now go on forEVER about how the dance community is my new 2nd art-home.  Fast forward to this week and I’m flailing my nelly wrists over Les Ballets Trockadero De Monte Carlo, or The Trocks, a drag ballet company making its seasonal stop in Chicago on Wednesday January 27th at the Harris Theater. Traditional ballet WILL piss me off, and the BF will frequently shush my feminist disgust when some tanorexic starlett gets onstage and I want to throw a sandwich at her. This will be my first time seeing the Trocks, but if Sid Smith’s right about the degree of muscles at this show, I’ll get shushed because I’m still talking about sandwiches. From the website:

Founded in 1974 by a group of ballet enthusiasts for the purpose of presenting a playful, entertaining view of traditional, classical ballet in parody form. The original concept of LES BALLETS TROCKADERO DE MONTE CARLO has not changed. It is a Company of professional male dancers performing the full range of the ballet and modern dance repertoire, including classical and original works in faithful renditions of the manners and conceits of those dance styles. The comedy is achieved by incorporating and exaggerating the foibles, accidents, and underlying incongruities of serious dance.  

So, apparently I’m in for some serious athleticism in classic forms, HOWEVER this time, I won’t need to snarl at a starving sack of bones passing off as a breathing person. The Trocks tickets aren’t cheap, but neither are these dance moves. Tickets here.

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Ric-Star!

December 16, 2009

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After years and years of hints and unconfirmed speculation in the pages of Marvel Comics X-Force, writer Peter David finally decided to tackle Rictor and Shatterstar’s relationship with issue #45 of X-Factor. In this issue, Shatterstar made his return to the fold after being absent for some time and had a jaw-dropping reunion with Rictor, as they greeted each other with a hot kiss and a warm embrace. Finally readers suspicions were validated!  When Peter David outted Shatterstar Rob Liefeld (Shatterstar’s original creator) was not too pleased with that character development, and made mention on his message board that he had no problem with gay characters if that’s where their true origins were, insisting that Shatterstar’s weren’t, and further stating that he could not wait to someday undo this, which would entail “ungaying” Shatterstar. Well praise the comic gods that Rob Liefeld has no say as to what happens to Shatterstar, as Marvel Comics Editor in Chief, Joe Quesada, commented in his weekly segment “Cup of Joe” on the Comic Book Resources website, that Marvel owns the character not Rob and although Rob is entitled to his opinion, Mr. Liefeld would have to wait to address that with Marvel’s NEXT editor in Chief. Snap!

There haven’t been any major developments as of late in the Ric-Star coupling but writer Peter David is promising to explore their relationship further, not only from formerly asexual Shatterstar’s and suddenly queer Rictor’s eyes, but also through the eyes of their teammates. Check out Lyle Masaki’s interview with Peter David over at Afterelton.com for more deets on Ric-star and be sure to check out January’s “Nation X: X-Factor” one-shot where it is rumored that Ric-Star’s relationship as well as Longshot and Dazzler’s (the unconfirmed rumored parents of Shatterstar) will be further explored!

–Colossus Matos

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I Blogged For BUTT

December 10, 2009

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It’s true. A little while ago, they put a call out for writers, and I snapped that up like it was BOGO dress shirts from Express (I don’t have lofty fashion goals…not YET, anyway). For my first contribution, I interviewed Marc Ruvolo, a sweet sweet honey bear that has a tribute to Klaus Nomi call Aspic Tines. The interview went well and I hope to do more for the BUTT Blog. Head over to the post and won’t you leave a comment? PREESH.

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