Affiliates
| Works by
Jennifer Doyle (Writer) |
-
Pop Out: Queer Warhol (1996),
Edited by Jennifer Doyle, Jonathan Flatley, and Jose Esteban Munoz
Andy Warhol was queer in more ways than one. A
fabulous queen, a fan of prurience and pornography, a great admirer of the
male body, he was well known as such to the gay audiences who enjoyed his
films, the police who censored them, the gallery owners who refused to
show his male nudes, and the artists who shied from his swishiness, not to
mention all the characters who populated the Factory. Yet even though
Warhol became the star of postmodernism, avant-garde, and pop culture,
this collection of essays is the first to explore, analyze, appreciate,
and celebrate the role of Warhol’s queerness in the making and reception
of his film and art. Ranging widely in approach and discipline, Pop Out
demonstrates that to ignore Warhol’s queerness is to miss what is most
valuable, interesting, sexy, and political about his life and work.
-
Written from the perspectives of art history, critical race theory,
psychoanalysis, feminist theory, cinema studies, and social and literary
theory, these essays consider Warhol in various contexts and within the
history of the communities in which he figured. The homoerotic subjects,
gay audiences, and queer contexts that fuel a certain fascination with
Warhol are discussed, as well as Batman, Basquiat, and Valerie Solanas.
Taken together, the essays in this collection depict Warhol’s career as a
practical social reflection on a wide range of institutions and
discourses, including those, from the art world to mass culture, that have
almost succeeded in sanitizing his work and his image.
General readers with interests in Warhol, Pop art, and gay and lesbian
issues will find this book appealing as will more academic audiences
working in art history, queer theory, cultural studies, postmodernism, and
popular culture.
Contributors. Brian Selsky, David E. James, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick,
Jennifer Doyle, Jonathan Flatley, José Esteban Muñoz, Mandy Merck, Marcie
Frank, Michael Moon, Sasha Torres, Simon Watney, and Thomas Waugh
David Wojnarowicz: A Definitive History of Five or Six Years on the Lower East Side (2006) with Giancarlo Ambrosino
In February 1991, the artist David Wojnarowicz (1954-1992) and the
philosopher Sylvère Lotringer met in a borrowed East Village apartment to
conduct a long-awaited dialogue on Wojnarowicz's work. Wojnarowicz was then
at the peak of his notoriety as the fiercest antagonist of morals crusader
Senator Jesse Helms--a notoriety that Wojnarowicz alternately embraced and
rejected. Already suffering the last stages of AIDS, David saw his dialogue
with Lotringer as a chance to set the record straight on his aspirations,
his personal history, and his political views. The two arranged to have this
three-hour dialogue video-recorded by a mutual friend, the artist Marion
Scemama.
Lotringer held on to the tape for a long time. After Wojnarowicz's death the
following year, he found the transcript enormously moving, yet somehow
incomplete. David was trying, often with heartbreaking eloquence, to define
not just his career but its position in time. The subject was huge, and
transcended the actual dialogue. Lotringer then spent the next several years
gathering additional commentary on Wojnarowicz's life and work from those
who knew him best--the friends with whom he collaborated.
Lotringer solicited personal testimony from Wojnarowicz's friends and other
artists, including Mike Bildo, Steve Brown, Julia Scher, Richard Kern, Carlo
McCormick, Ben Neill, Kiki Smith, Nan Goldin, Marguerite van Cook, and
others. What emerges from these masterfully-conducted interviews is a
surprising insight into something art history knows, but systematically
hides: the collaborative nature of the work of any "great artist." All these
respondents had, at one time, made performances, movies, sculptures,
photographs, and other collaborative works with Wojnarowicz. In this sense,
Wojnarowicz appears not only as a great originator, but as a great
synthesizer.
Sex Objects: Art And The Dialectics Of Desire (2006)
-- Finalist 2006 Lambda Literary Award for
Arts and Culture
The declaration that a work of art is “about sex” is often announced to the
public as a scandal after which there is nothing else to say about the work
or the artist-controversy concludes a conversation when instead it should
begin a new one.
Moving beyond debates about pornography and censorship, Jennifer Doyle shows
us that sex in art is as diverse as sex in everyday life: exciting,
ordinary, emotional, traumatic, embarrassing, funny, even profoundly boring.
Sex Objects examines the reception and frequent misunderstanding of
highly sexualized images, words, and performances. In chapters on the
“boring parts” of Moby-Dick, the scandals that dogged the painter
Thomas Eakins, the role of women in Andy Warhol's Factory films, “bad sex”
and Tracey Emin's crudely evocative line drawings, and L.A. artist Vaginal
Davis's pornographic parodies of Vanessa Beecroft's performances, Sex
Objects challenges simplistic readings of sexualized art and instead
investigates what such works can tell us about the nature of desire.
In Sex Objects, Doyle offers a creative and original exploration of
how and where art and sex connect, arguing that to proclaim a piece of art
“about sex” reveals surprisingly little about the work, the artist, or the
spectator. Deftly interweaving anecdotal and personal writing with critical,
feminist, and queer theory, she reimagines the relationship between sex and
art in order to better understand how the two meet-and why it matters.
| |
| Related Topics Click any of the following links for more information on similar topics of interest in relation to this page.
Jennifer Doyle Is Listed As A Favorite Of (Alphabetical Order By First Name) TO BE DETERMINED
Jennifer's Favorite Authors/Books (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
[As of x] TO BE DETERMINED |