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BOOKS: Art & Queer Culture

BOOKS: Art & Queer Culture

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If LGBT visibility is of prime importance for acceptance, then what could be more important than LGBT art?

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Art-queer-culturex400_0If you are gay, if you are lesbian, and if you are feeling as if you are swirling down the drain of assimilation, the life preserver you may need to save your sense of uniqueness may be Catherine Lord and Richard Meyer's beautiful and enlightening book, Art & Queer Culture.

Lord and Meyer's book looks at both high culture (Picasso's portrait of Gertrude Stein) and low culture (signs forbidding the use of cologne in the L.A. leather bar Cuffs) as it explores the affirmative power of gay imagery.

The book surveys images made not only for fine art but those intended for underground and private audiences. And not all the artists are gay. Examining images and artwork from the 19th century poses certain problems in identity labeling, "notably the unstable definitions of gay, lesbian and homosexual," writes Meyer. Thus is the justified use of the word "queer" to encompass the large expanse of nonnormative behavior.

The most enlightening aspect of this wildly varied book is the presentation of images you may have seen for decades and become inured to. Images that may have lost their power over the decades, like Crawford Barton's stunning photo of two gay men kissing on a stoop next to a presumably heterosexual couple on a bright sunny afternoon in the Castro. Many, including this writer, upon seeing that image for the first time in 1977 felt a soaring sense of elation, that a new era was dawning.

There is the insider's mordant wit and outsider's gaze in works like Deborah Bright's Dream Girls, in which she inserts herself into a film still usurping George Peppard as he tries to light Audrey Hepburn's cigarette in Breakfast at Tiffany's. The image is funny and erotic, and Bright takes the innate campiness hostage for her own mulitlayered message. Perhaps she is rescuing Truman Capote's bisexual character from the censoring of her story in the film version of his book.

The last third of the book is printed on pink uncoated stock and is a compendium of documents, excerpts, evidence, essays, and ephemera that if nothing else shows the astoundingly resilient spirit of a culture that has been murdered, jailed, censored, ignored, and hidden for centuries.

The book was released by Phaidon almost a year ago, but it certainly deserves another long look. As we are granted more rights to marry each other, serve in the military, and adopt children, this book is an elegant reminder of why you may want to be careful to not fit in too much.

9780714849355-1x633_0Thomas Eakins, Swimming, 1883-1885

9780714849355-3x633_0 Richard Fayerwreath Babcock, Join the Navy, 1917

9780714849355-4x633_0 Charles Demuth, Dancing Sailors, 1917

9780714849355-5x633_0 Charles 'Teenie' Harris, 1955

9780714849355-6x633_0 Crawford Barton, A San Francisco Street Scene, 1977

9780714849355-7x633_0 Felix Gonzales-Torres, "untitled" (Billboard), 1992

9780714849355-8x633_0 Deborah Bright, Dream Girls, 1989-90

9780714849355-9x633_0 Alex Donis, Abdullah and Sergeant Adams, 2001

9780714849355-10x633_0 Assume vivid astro focus (AVAF) Homocrap #1, 2005

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Christopher Harrity

Christopher Harrity is the Manager of Online Production for Here Media, parent company to The Advocate and Out. He enjoys assembling online features on artists and photographers, and you can often find him poring over the mouldering archives of the magazines.
Christopher Harrity is the Manager of Online Production for Here Media, parent company to The Advocate and Out. He enjoys assembling online features on artists and photographers, and you can often find him poring over the mouldering archives of the magazines.