Tag Archives: Zackary Drucker

HUMAN RESOURCES BENEFIT AND AUCTION

Join artists and performers Laura OwensRon Athey, My Barbarian (Malik Gaines, Jade Gordon and Alexandro Segade), Piero Golia, D’ette Nogle, Nora Berman, Sam Durant, Young Joon KwakZackary Drucker, Kibum Kim, Eve Fowler, Mara McCarthy, Jackie Tarquinio, and many more at the HUMAN RESOURCES BENEFIT AND AUCTION this weekend at Ghebaly Gallery.

 

HUMAN RESOURCES BENEFIT AND AUCTION, Sunday, November 12, from 5 pm to 8 pm.

GHEBALY GALLERY, 2245 East Washington Boulevard, downtown Los Angeles.

humanresourcesla.com

Ron Athey.

solar_anus_0

 

KWAME BRATHWAITE AT APERTURE GALA

Join co-hosts Edward Enninful and Hari Nef (among others) in honoring Kwame Brathwaite, Zackary DruckerInez Van Lamsweerde, and Vinoodh Matadin at APERTURE’s 65-anniversary gala.

Justin Vivian Bond and St. Beauty will perform, and the evening will feature a video by Inez and Vinoodh, with a soundtrack by Anohni.

 

ELEMENTS OF STYLE—2017 APERTURE GALA, Monday, October 30, from 6 pm to midnight.

IAC BUILDING, 555 West 18th Street, New York City.

aperture.org/gala

kwamebrathwaite.com

APERTURE—ELEMENTS OF STYLE issue, available now.

aperture.org/shop/aperture-228-magazine

Image credit: Aperture.

e2034_sep5_aperture_image

render_228_3

 

THE COCKETTES — TRICIA’S WEDDING

“[The Cockettes, in TRICIA’S WEDDING] imaged and imagined a negation of ruling order, using satirical doubling and the violation of taboos to terrorize the notion of the paternalistic state… They at first appear to relish the pretense of importance they are mimicking, an act of class drag that exaggerates their own social status. Soon, though [after “Eartha Kitt” (Anton Dunnigan) spikes the punch bowl with LSD], the pious wedding ceremony descends into the narrative’s Bacchanalian climax, desecrating the pious order of Nixon’s heteronormative ritual.” — Malik Gaines*

In a tribute to the gloriously transgressive, acid-tripping San Francisco performance troupe, the Transnation Film Festival presents a screening of three Cockettes classics—TRICIA’S WEDDING, ELEVATORGIRLS IN BONDAGE, and PALACE—introduced by original Cockette Fayette Hauser.

 

TRICIA’S WEDDING, ELEVATOR GIRLS IN BONDAGE, and PALACE, Saturday, October 14, at 9:30 pm.

TRANSNATION FILM FESTIVAL 2017, hosted by ZACKARY DRUCKER, October 13–15

SILENT MOVIE THEATRE, 611 North Fairfax Avenue, Los Angeles.

transnationfestival.org/2017-film-festival/

*Malik Gaines, “The Cockettes, Sylvester, and Performance as Life,” in Black Performance on the Outskirts of the Left: A History of the Impossible (New York: NYU Press, 2017).

Tricia’s Wedding production stills and poster.

Top, from left: Dusty, John Flowers, and Gary Cherry. Middle, from left: Kreemah Ritz, Bobby, Steven Arnold, Johnny, unidentified, John Rothermel.
Photographs by Scott Runyon. Poster by Todd Trexler, 1972.

Dusty

cockettes023

Kreemah

tricia

poster_tricia_thumb

 

INITIATION

In August of 2014, letterpress studio Bullhorn Press moved into Otherwild, a shop and graphic design studio in Echo Park. In the spirit of their newfound collaboration, Otherwild’s Rachel Berks and Bullhorn’s Jaye Fishel founded INITIATION, a limited edition letterpress print series featuring the work of 18 notable Los Angeles artists.

box_grande

box7_grande

daikoff_grande

From Otherwild’s website:

The project was born of the desire to create material in the tradition of the democratic multiple, bypassing the gallery system to distribute artist multiples to a wider public at a reasonable cost, whilst, as Lucy Lippard said, “to see artists able to profit economically from broad communication rather than from the lack of it.” INITIATION aims to support artists not only economically, but also provides a platform to explore the art making possibilities on the letterpress, a medium unfamiliar to most every artist represented in the edition. The participating artists: Math Bass, Akina Cox, Ania Diakoff, Zackary Drucker, Lauren Davis Fisher, Eve Fowler, Anna Sew Hoy, Molly Larkey, Lauren Mackler, Dylan Mira, MPA, Taisha Paggett, Shauna Steinbach, A.L. Steiner, Julie Tolentino, Kimberly Varella, Erika Vogt, Suzanne Wright. Each print is available in an edition of 70, with 1-40 available as individual prints, 41-70 as a complete boxed set.

fisher_grande

drucker_grande

larkey_grande

mpa_grande

wright2_grande

TRANS.IENT TALK

Participants in the roving exhibition trans.ient, which displayed the work of transgender artists in a U-Haul truck on four street locations throughout Los Angeles, were at the West Hollywood Public Library last night to discuss their practices and the impact of their collaboration.

c6aed7_ed8284a2b88e403caf6b36af9802171a.jpeg_srz_p_983_589_75_22_0.50_1.20_0

trans.ient was organized and curated by Kean O’Brien, an multidisciplinary artist whose work primarily concerns community engagement and collaboration. The show featured works in various media–sculpture, photography, installation, sound, and video–by Heather Cassils, Zackary Drucker, Pilar Gallego, Nicki Green, Jules Gimbrone, and Oli Rodriguez. Artists Niv Acosta, Yishay Garbasz, Laub, Madsen Minax, and Finn Paul were not present on the panel.

IMG_3562

A number of the artists addressed the importance of creating a space for transgender people to represent themselves, particularly when major institutions aren’t receptive towards their work, and their identity is highly politicized in popular media. This raised an additional question: when is it important to produce self-consciously political work, and when is it important to be personal? In partial answer, Zackary Drucker–who has shown her fantastical films around the world, including the most recent Whitney Biennial–summoned the feminist mantra: “the personal is political.”

Throughout the talk, the queer whimsy of the U-Haul as a site of self-representation and reclamation returned to the fore. O’Brien admired the truck’s ability to squeeze unlikely viewers uncomfortably close together, to address work which unabashedly addressed serious and sensitive topics like violence, sex, sexuality, gender, and familial trauma. He lamented that major art institutions seem interested in transgender artists only when their work focuses on their bodies, and saw trans.ient as a way to combat that tendency.

Lost Lake excerpt from zackary drucker on Vimeo.

“The question we pose to hetero, cis culture is, ‘What does it mean to be in a body?'” Drucker said. “There isn’t a space for the body in an object-based art market. There isn’t a space for the body in digital culture.” Prolific and powerful performance artist Cassils noted that early pieces involved melting blocks of ice with their body, as a way to incorporate the body while resisting commodification. But, Cassils added, it’s a complex issue, and each artist has to decide for themselves how to deal with multiple audiences without sacrificing their integrity.

As the panel closed the tour of trans.ient, they made one thing clear: identity is even less stable than a U-Haul truck, privy to the swells of traffic, the potholes in the road, and the slope of parking spots. Confronting this instability is not just a creative concern but a political priority.