Summer 2004 |
THE ARCHIVE |
Issue #13 |
The Journal of the Leslie/Lohman Gay Art Foundation |
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New
Books of Note
by Wayne Snellen |
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The
Queer Encyclopedia of the Visual Arts.
Edited by Claude J. Summers. 2004. Cleis Press, USA. ISBN 1-57344-191-0
(pbk.). 373 pp. with illustrations. This book goes a
long way to answering the question of LGBTQ presence in the visual arts.
It truly is a book about "recovering and reclaiming our artistic
heritage." Well written essays
document the course of gay visual contributions to the arts in alphabetical
listings from Abbema to Zenil. Each essay includes the authors name,
a bibliography and cross references. Of course, as with
all such endeavors, it leaves out as much as it includes. It is heavily
"biased in favor of European and American artistic traditions."
Even so, "as the first comprehensive work of its kind, this encyclopedia
is an important beginning, not an end." One can also check out
the website at http://www.glbtq.com/ for new and updated entries and
information. |
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Hidden
Histories. 20th Century Male Same Sex Lovers in the Visual Arts.
Michael Petry. 2004. Artmedia Press, UK. ISBN 1-902889-10 X. 144 pp.
with illustrations. Is it necessary
to know the sexual orientation of an artist and who his lover was in
order to better appreciate and understand his work? I think the answer
is, yes-we want to know "that Dora Marr was Picasso's lover and
muse, not his maid or cook" and we begin to draw inferences and
correlations from that fact which influences the way we look at Picasso's
art. Although, this book
concentrates only on the gay male artist and his lover we can draw the
same correlations about lesbian artists but alas that book is for someone
else to write. Interestingly, Mr. Petry states in his introduction that
"it is not this text's contention that there is a gay aesthetic;
a glance at the diversity of work included in this text should dissuade
readers from such a conclusion. However, each artist, whatever his style
or the content of his work, has been influenced by his same sex desires."
There are included
a series of essays on definitions and terms of reference and essays
relating the context in which gay men have had to exist and how they
found ways to bypass the heterosexual abyss. The last part of the book
is devoted to a series of short artist's biographies. This book, as does
the previous one, greatly expands our knowledge and view of the LGBT
experience in the visual arts and as such makes an important contribution
to the burgeoning field of LGBTQ studies. |
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Turkish
Wrestling. Lawrence Grecco. 2004. Apollon Press, USA. ISBN 0-9729842-0-8. 92 pp. with illustrations. Finally, there is
a book on the subject of the famous and ancient sport of Turkish wrestling,
Kirkpinar based on the ancient legend by the same name. Mr. Grecco's
book is lavishly illustrated with superb photographs and just enough
text to explain what all the excitement is about. Although, this is
not a "gay" event it is homoerotic by its very nature-men
wrestling for the title of national champion, in a stadium filled with
men dressed in only custom made leather pants, called "kispets,"
and oiled bodies glistening in the sun-last man standing is a national
hero-his friends and relatives cheering him along every step of the
way. Mr. Grecco describes
the entry of the contestants into the arena, "...taking their cue
from the drums and flutes blaring from the sidelines, the competitors
begin their warrior walk." He describes the oiling and the actual
tournament which he says "...is perhaps closer in spirit, if not
practice, to Japan's sumo matches, an ancient marriage of art and sport
where ceremony and traditional heritage are on par with strength and
skill." The best wrestler or "the Bespehivan" receives
a golden belt from none other than the Aga, the local mayor, and the
president of Turkey. Mr. Grecco's book
is both a homage and documentation of a 500 year old tradition which
has survived unchanged into the 21st century. |
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