Erasure lead singer Clive Bell opens Hasting gay art exhibition on World Aids Day
Hastings, home of the saucy
postcard, will be raising eyebrows once more
this December with the launch of a major new art
exhibition – “Think Pink” – bringing together a
bevy of the UK’s leading gay artists. Opening on
World Aids Day – December 1st – the show
challenges near-neighbour Brighton’s seaside gay
monopoly by combining art with key messages on
safer sex and modern gay life.
| The exhibition is
sponsored by London based nightclube Trade
and will be officially opened by Andy Bell –
the lead singer of pop group Erasure, one of
the world’s most well-known HIV-positive
artists and a frequent visitor to Hastings.
Think Pink will show work by seven leading gay artists, including Andrew Logan, creator of the Alternative Miss World, TradeMark - famous for his pioneering fliers for gay nightclubs Trade and Heaven, and Nigel Grimmer - curator of the gay doll museum. The show will be running for one week at the south coast’s trendy new art spot, The Arts Forum, and half of all proceeds from the sale of artwork will be donated to Terrence Higgins Trust. But the show's message isn’t just about gay art. The local NHS Primary Care Trust are co-sponsoring the event, which will include hard hitting sexual health statistics, messages on safer sex and talks from people living with HIV and half of all proceeds from sales of work are being donated to the Terrence Higgins Trust. The show is the brainchild of gay art entrepreneur Alastair Fairley, who started the project by sending online messages to gay artists from all over the world. Alastair said: “I realised there are hundreds of gay artists working out there and thought it might be interesting to start grouping them together. This show is the first of those experiments, but it’s good to show art can spur other ideas too”. The star-packed event is designed to make a splash on the coast and around the country: Alastair is already looking to take the challenging event on tour |
Think Pink! runs from
Saturday December 2nd to Friday December 8th
at the arts forum gallery in Hastings.
Source: www.goodgalleryguide.com |
|
Banned Milan gay art exhibition open in Florence

Source: italymag.co.uk
A huge exhibition of gay art has finally found a home
in Florence after clashes with Catholic politicians
forced organisers to pull the plug on the same show
in Milan earlier this year.
Over 200 works by 150 artists are on display in
Florence’s Palazzina Reale tracing connections
between art and homosexuality from the birth of
photography to the present day in the largest show of
its kind ever held in Italy.
Among the works exhibited are a sadomasochistic
portrait of a man in a gimp mask by controversial
American photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, drawings
of heavily muscled men engaged in graphic sexual acts
by fetish artist Tom of Finland, and a picture of two
men kissing under a crucifix by British painter John
Kirby.
The privately funded exhibition was originally set to
open to the public at Milan’s Palazzo della Ragione
in July but stayed shut amid concerns about whether
the works on display offended Catholics and were
suitable for children.
Milan Mayor Letizia Moratti insisted on seeing each
of the works to be included in the exhibition and
drew up a blacklist of paintings and sculptures that
had to be removed before it could open to the public.
But Milan Culture Councillor Vittorio Sgarbi and the
show’s organisers decided to scrap the exhibition
altogether and move it to a different city rather
than withdraw the contested works.
The show has opened in Florence uncensored, albeit
without the official blessing of the city council.
”The public finally has the opportunity to judge for
themselves what is perhaps the most contested
exhibition of recent years,” said curator Eugenio
Viola at the show’s inauguration.
”It’s good news for freedom of expression and
thought, and a happy epilogue to a difficult affair”.
Viola has based his selection of works on a common
theme of expression rather than on the sexuality of
the artists, who are both gay and straight.
”On the basis of that logic some works have an openly
homoerotic content, while in others this expresses
itself in a less obvious way through codes, symbols,
allegories and metaphors,” he explained.
The show takes in over 100 years of gay art,
including black-and-white photography by German
artist Wilhelm von Gloeden from 1900, balletic nudes
by Bruce of Los Angeles from the 1950s, portraits of
famous male torsos by American fashion photographer
Herb Ritts from the 1980s, and a video installation
by bald German couple Eva and Adele, self-proclaimed
‘hermaphrodite twins’, from the 1990s.
Other famous names include David Hockney, Keith
Haring and Bruce Weber as well as the British royal
family’s favourite snapper Mario Testino. Self-taught
Italian artist Carol Rama is among the 20 women
artists with works on display.
But the most likely crowd-pullers are two sculptures
by young Italian artists that topped Moratti’s
blacklist in Milan: Paolo Schmidlin’s Miss Kitty
(2006) - the life-size replica of an ageing,
semi-naked transvestite in a wig, white underpants
and stockings bearing a strong resemblance to Pope
Benedict XVI; and Paolo Cassara’s Pieta’ (2007),
which portrays a latex-clad Virgin Mary cradling a
blow-up doll in place of the baby Jesus.
‘Art and Homosexuality - From Von Gloeden to Pierre
et Gilles’ runs at the Palazzina Reale in Florence
until 6 January 2008.
Source: italymag.co.uk
Largest ever Gilbert & George retrospective in Italy this winter
The largest ever retrospective of the art world’s most famous Anglo-Italian pairing, Gilbert & George, has opened in the northern Italian town of Rivoli.
The exhibition at the Castello di Rivoli showcases 150 works by the enigmatic duo, who despite their classic suits and impeccable manners produce provocative, anti-conformist art that frequently involves images of bodily fluids and nudity.
Known for their huge iconoclastic photomontage grids, the pair almost always appear in their own compositions and have spent the last four decades blurring the distinction between art and artist.
“Each of our pictures is a kind of visual love letter from us to the viewer,” said George, introducing the retrospective.
“We are dealing with universal subjects: death, hope, life, fear, sex, money, race, religion - these are all things that are relevant to everybody”.
The Tate Modern in London hosted the same show earlier this year, where it split critical opinion strongly.
Originally from the village of San Martino near Bolzano in northern Italy, Gilbert Proesch met English-born George Passmore when they were both studying at St Martin’s School of Art in London in 1967.
The pair said in an interview with the Daily Telegraph in 2002 that “it was love at first sight”.
The Rivoli show begins with a film of their 1969 performance art piece, Singing Sculpture, which involved the duo standing on a table while singing and dancing sometimes for eight hours at a time - to the wartime favourite Underneath the Arches.
Other ‘living sculpture’ films on display here include Gordon’s Makes Us Drunk (1972), showing the pair drinking gin, and A Portrait of the Artists as Young Men (1970), in which they stare into the middle distance to the soundtrack of a thunderstorm.
Next on show are early examples of the rectangular photomontage grids the duo continue to use today such as their Dirty Words series (1977), which juxtaposes images of the artists and grubby urban backdrops with swearwords or obscene drawings found in graffiti on the London streets.
The exhibition includes more irreverent work by the pair created during the 1980s and 1990s including Hunger (1982), from a series depicting animated cartoon characters engaged in explicit sexual acts, and Shitty Naked Human World (1994) from the Naked Shit Pictures, in which the artists appear nude alongside images of giant pieces of faeces.
Among their more recent work in the show are the New Horny Pictures (2001), for which Gilbert & George collected, classified and arranged adverts placed in newspapers by male prostitutes offering a wide variety of services.
The exhibition also features their 2005 Venice Biennale Ginkgo Pictures, which are based on the symmetrical leaves of the tree that thrives even in polluted urban environments.
Ending the retrospective are Six Bomb Pictures (2006), a comment on the London terrorist attacks in July 2005.
Gilbert & George collected headline billboard posters from the Evening Standard newspaper to represent the city “in an age of terror” and describe the series as the most chilling pictures we have created to date”.
“We always say we’re here to deshock rather than to shock we can deal with a difficult subject in a humanistic way that doesn’t send people running out of the gallery, they explained.
“But art has to be extreme or it’s invisible”.
Following its run in Italy, the exhibition will transfer to the United States next year for a four-month stay at the de Young Museum in San Francisco.
Gilbert & George: Major Exhibition is at the Castello di Rivoli until January 13 2008.
Source: www.italymag.co.uk
Rowling reveals: Dumbledore is gay
Albus Dumbledore, master wizard and Headmaster of Hogwarts, is gay. J.K. Rowling, author of the mega-selling fantasy series that ended last summer, outed the beloved character Friday night while appearing before a full house at Carnegie Hall.
After reading briefly from the final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," she took questions from audience members.
She was asked by one young fan whether Dumbledore finds "true love."
"Dumbledore is gay," the author responded to gasps and applause.
She then explained that Dumbledore was smitten with rival Gellert Grindelwald, whom he defeated long ago in a battle between good and bad wizards. "Falling in love can blind us to an extent," Rowling said of Dumbledore's feelings, adding that Dumbledore was "horribly, terribly let down."
Dumbledore's love, she observed, was his "great tragedy."
"Oh, my god," Rowling concluded with a laugh, "the fan fiction."
Potter readers on fan sites and elsewhere on the Internet have speculated on the sexuality of Dumbledore, noting that he has no close relationship with women and a mysterious, troubled past. And explicit scenes with Dumbledore already have appeared in fan fiction.
Rowling told the audience that while working on the planned sixth Potter film, "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," she spotted a reference in the script to a girl who once was of interest to Dumbledore. A note was duly passed to director David Yates, revealing the truth about her character.
Rowling, finishing a brief "Open Book Tour" of the United States, her first tour here since 2000, also said that she regarded her Potter books as a "prolonged argument for tolerance" and urged her fans to "question authority."
Not everyone likes her work, Rowling said, likely referring to Christian groups that have alleged the books promote witchcraft. Her news about Dumbledore, she said, will give them one more reason.
Source: Time Magazine
Russian minister ban gay kiss from Paris exhibition
It is an intriguing image. Shot among the birch trees and snow of a Siberian forest, two policemen kiss each other passionately on the lips. They hold and - this is not entirely clear - possibly caress each other's buttocks.
But the work by a Russian art collective has proved too much for Russia's culture minister, Alexander Sokolov. On Monday Mr Sokolov announced that he was banning the photo, entitled Kissing Policemen (An Epoch of Clemency), from an exhibition of contemporary Russian art due to be exhibited in Paris next week.
Mr Sokolov described the photo as political provocation and said he was pulling it, together with 16 other works, from a show at Paris's Maison Rouge exhibition hall. The exhibits were all displayed in Russia this year at Moscow's state-owned Tretyakov gallery.
"If this exhibition appears [in Paris] it will bring shame on Russia. In this case, all of us will bear full responsibility," the minister said. "It is inadmissible...to take all this pornography, kissing policemen and erotic pictures to Paris."
The minister also banned another work by the same irreverent group, Blue Noses, that shows Vladimir Putin, George Bush and Osama bin Laden cavorting on a double bed in their underpants. Customs officers confiscated the montage from a British art dealer last year when he tried to take it to London.
Yesterday artists and critics derided the minister's decision. "The state is beginning to administer culture in the same way it did under Khrushchev," said Alexander Shaburov, one of the two artists in Blue Noses.
Mr Shaburov said that he and fellow artist Viacheslav Mizin had created Kissing Policemen as a homage to the celebrated British graffiti artist Banksy. "We were inspired by Banksy's iconic image of two constables kissing. We wanted to do the same but in Russia," Mr Shaburov said.
The image had nothing to do with gay people, he added. Instead, it was an absurdist fantasy about what might happen if everyone showed mercy and tenderness to each other. "Given the fact the state has banned it, we haven't quite reached this point yet," he noted.
The photo was taken in the Siberian city of Novosibirsk, the artist said. The work was shown at the Tretyakov gallery in February and March, and is now in a small private gallery in Moscow. "There was no scandal when it was shown here in Russia," Mr Shaburov said. "The aim of our work is to take cliches and to make them as absurd as possible. We enjoy taking newspaper headlines and transforming them into something idiotic."
Russia's leader Vladimir Putin is not exactly known for his sense of humour. One of his first acts as president was to ban Russia's version of Spitting Image.
Moscow is home to several world-class art museums including both the New and Old Tretyakov galleries, which have an astonishing collection of 19th century Russian art, as well as the Pushkin, home to impressionist and other masterpieces.
But the little visited museum of state art just next to the Kremlin gives a better idea of current official tastes. It is filled with canvases showing second world war heroes, some legless; politicians; bearded Orthodox priests; and young women wearing flouncy dresses.
Source: the Guardian
Vandals destroy Serrano's provocative erotic art in Sweden

A grainy video of four masked vandals running through an art gallery in Sweden, smashing sexually explicit photographs with crowbars and axes to the strain of thundering death-metal music, was posted on YouTube last week.
This was no joke or acting stunt. It was what actually happened on a quiet Friday afternoon in Lund, a small university town in southern Sweden where "The History of Sex," an exhibition of photographs by the New York artist Andres Serrano, had opened two weeks earlier.
Around 3:30, half an hour before closing time, four vandals wearing black masks stormed into a space known as the Kulturen Gallery while shouting in Swedish, "We don't support this," plus an expletive. They pushed visitors aside, entered a darkened room where some of the photographs were displayed and began smashing the glass protecting the photographs and then hacking away at the prints.
The bumpy video, evidently shot with a hand-held camera by someone who ran into the gallery with the attackers, intersperses images of the Serrano photographs with lettered commentary in Swedish like "This is art?" before showing the vandals at work.
No guards were on duty in the gallery, said Viveca Ohlsson, the show's curator, although security videos captured much of the incident. "There was one woman who works at the gallery who tried to stop them until she saw the axes and crowbars," Ohlsson said. "These men are dangerous."
By the time the masked men had finished, half the show - seven 130-by-154-centimeter, or 50-by-60-inch, photographs, worth about $200,000 overall - had been destroyed. The men left behind leaflets reading, "Against decadence and for a healthier culture." The fliers listed no name or organization.
"I was shocked and horrified," Serrano said in a telephone interview Monday from New York. "I never expected something like this, especially in this magical town, which is so sweet I joked about it being like something out of Harry Potter."
Serrano said he had flown to Sweden for the opening and was met with great enthusiasm by gallery visitors. "The reaction was so positive," he said. "I could never imagine anything like this happening."
Officials at the local police station said Monday that the vandals had not been caught but that they were believed to be part of a neo-Nazi group.
Ohlsson said the attack was clearly well planned. "We think that they had been at the gallery a few days before," she said. "They knew where to go."
The show consists of photographs, made in 1995 and 1996, of various sex acts, including a depiction of a naked woman fondling a stallion. It was divided into two rooms. One had white walls, the other black. The vandals went to the black room, where, Ohlsson said, the photographs were a bit racier.
This is not the first time Serrano's work has been attacked, physically or in words. In 1989, the National Endowment for the Arts came under fire from conservative politicians and religious groups for helping to finance a $15,000 grant to Serrano related to past work that included a photograph of a crucifix immersed in urine. A print of that work was attacked and destroyed in 1997 when it was on view at the National Gallery of Art in Melbourne.
It is not the first time the Kulturen Gallery has seen violence, either. About 10 years ago vandals raced into the gallery and put paint on images by a Swedish photographer.
"The History of Sex" remains on view, but with bolstered security, Ohlsson said, explaining that the group had threatened on the Internet to attack the show again.
Paula Cooper, Serrano's New York dealer, whose gallery in Chelsea exhibited his "History of Sex" photographs in 1997, said she was horrified by the attack in Sweden. Cooper said that her gallery was working to replace the destroyed photographs as soon as possible so they could go back on view in Lund. (Serrano produced each in editions of three.)
After "The History of Sex" closes in Lund in December, it is to travel to the Alingsas Art Museum in Alingsas, Sweden.
Source: The International Herald Tribune
Sex and art at the Barbican
The Barbican is bringing together the world of art and sex for a lengthy exhibition on the art of seduction. From erotic drawings on ancient pottery and beautiful paintings of nudes to artistic sex toys and pornographic videos, Seduced at Barbican is only for over 18s and is sure to send shockwaves throughout London.
Whats On
Seduced: Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now
Aimed at educating London on the representation of sex from each and every era, Seduced at Barbican includes about 250 works of art from over 2000 years. The pieces in the collection are from public and private collections, and some of the pieces have never before been seen in the public view.
Famous artists
At the Barbican’s sex exhibition you can feast your eyes on work by famous artists including Pablo Picasso, Jeff Koons, Andy Warhol, Francis Bacon, August Rodin, Egon Schiele, JMW Turner plus loads more. See a side of your favourite artist that you’ve never seen before – who knew Picasso could be so pervy?
Sex and art through the ages
Sexuality and seduction has long been the theme of many pieces of art. From the sexual hedonism of ancient Greece to the sometimes shocking works of contemporary artists, creative types of all cultures and time periods have tried to combine the worlds of art and sex. Seduced at Barbican is an homage to their ingenuity as well as the indulgent – or prudish – times of the past.
On display
The Seduced exhibition includes sex-related art and artefacts from all eras. You’ll be able to see Roman marbles, Indian manuscripts, Renaissance and Baroque paintings and sculptures, Japanese woodcuts plus contemporary videos - yes, videos. The work might shock you, but it’s all in the name of art.
Seduced at Barbican is on view from 12th October 2007 – 27th January 2008 at the Barbican Art Gallery. Hours of admission are 11am – 6pm Tuesdays and Thursdays and 11am – 8pm on other days.
Click here to visit the homepage of the Barbican.
Source: viewlondon.co.uk
The coming out story of artist Paul Richmond in LA gallery
An exhibition of paintings addressing GLBTQ issues by artist Paul Richmond is currently on display at BoMA: The Bar of Modern Art. A special reception event will be held on Friday, October 5th from 8pm – midnight. The evening's festivities will include the unveiling of a special painting honoring the late Tammy Faye Messner and performances by Miss Gay Pride Ohio 2007, Paige Passion.
Paul Richmond is a 27 year old artist whose powerful paintings embody the "ins and outs" of a topic at the forefront of current affairs: sexual orientation. Drawing upon his own experiences as a young man who was raised in a conservative, Midwestern environment and struggled to come to terms with his homosexuality, he explores deeply personal feelings, insecurities, fears and triumphs in this exhibition which was introduced at the Ohio Art League Gallery in March. Several additional paintings, including "Remembering Tammy Faye" will be presented in the BoMA show.
Richmond explains, "In my opinion, Tammy Faye demonstrated inspirational courage and surprising depth throughout her colorful life, from her open-armed embrace of homosexuals to the self-deprecating humor that lasted until the end. It is my hope that her legacy will be even more far-reaching than her eyelashes, and this painting is my way of expressing that." Proceeds from the painting will be donated to the Tammy Faye Memorial Trust Fund.
The Bar of Modern Art is a unique multimedia venue located in downtown Columbus Ohio at 583 E. Broad Street. BoMA is housed in a renovated historic stone church built in 1896. It includes a fine dining 100 seat restaurant, seven bars and 2 dancefloors. BoMA strives to bring patrons art in its many aspects through music entertainment, visual and performing art, and fine dining. Visit www.barofmodernart.com for more information.
To view Richmond's work online and find out more about this event, visit www.absolutearts.com/portfolios/p/prichmond
source: outinsanfrancisco.com
New exhibition focuses on 20 years of HIV
A
solo exhibition coming to London next month will
explore the changing perception of HIV in the
capital over the last 20 years.
Rebound
will be shown at Wellcome Collection, a new
cultural venue on London's Euston Road, between
11 and 28 October. It
will display the sketches and diary notes of
artist Paul Ryan. The
materials provide a compelling insight into the
HIV epidemic in London from 1987, when the first
clear information about the disease emerged, to
2007, by which time successful treatments have
been established. The
title of the exhibition, Rebound, refers to the
experience of declining health and hopes of
those affected by HIV, which hit a low point in
the mid 1990s before 'rebounding' to restored
health for many and optimism for the
future. A
recurrent theme of the exhibition is 'intimacy'
and the barriers that HIV carriers face when
disclosing their status. The
20-year period will be represented by a
wall-mounted, linear, chronological display of
notebooks. Larger
drawings will sit alongside a
specially-commissioned wall drawing.
"The
sketchbooks have become a bit of a habit, but
hopefully a useful one," explains Paul
Ryan. Rebound will exhibit at Wellcome Collection, 183 Euston Road, London from 11-28 October. Access to the gallery is free. The open times are Tuesdays, Wednesday, Fridays and Saturdays 10:00 - 18:00, Thursdays 10:00 - 22:00 and Sundays 11:00 - 18:00.
Click here to go to the gallery’s homepage.
source: pinknews.co.uk
Magic of Theatre Design at NY gallery Leslie-Lohman this fall

A dazzling array of some 150 theatrical set and costume design models and sketches will be on display in StageStruck: The Magic of Theatre Design at Leslie/Lohman Gay Art Foundation Gallery (26 Wooster, between Grand & Canal, SoHo, NYC) from November 14 to December 22.
StageStruck celebrates the creative genius of dozens of set and costume designers, both male and female-all of whom happen to be gay-working with authors, composers and choreographers who are also gay. Original sketches, models and props have been gathered from a variety of sources, including numerous private collections and from many of the designers themselves. There will be a public reception for the opening of the exhibit from 6 to 8PM on Wednesday, November 14. Additionally, there will be an invitation only celebrity preview Tuesday, November 13.
Goto the Leslie-Lohman Gay Art Foundation
Source : Broadway World