Gay Art?
Disentangling ‘being queer’ from LGBTQ+ identities in queer art history’.
Are there valid connections to be
made between the concepts of ‘homosexuality’ and ‘art’? To what extent do queer
theory and performative approaches to identity challenge the formulation of
these categories?
A discussion point: How useful is this table?
Saslow, J.M. (1999) Pictures
and Passions: A History of Homosexuality in the Visual Arts New York,
Viking, Penguin Group.
Reed, C. (2011) Art
and Homosexuality: A History of Ideas Oxford, Oxford University Press.
Barlow, C. (Ed.)
(2017) Queer British Art 1861-1967 London,
Tate Publishing.
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Concepts of Homosexuality
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Normal
Part of Maturation
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Encounter
of One Normal / One Deviant
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Separate
Identity
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Performative
Role
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Depictions by insiders
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Greek vessel paintings
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Brassai’s photographs
Gauguin’s Polynesian paintings of mahus
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J.E.B.’s photographs
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Tokugawa prints
Delia Grace’s photos
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Depictions by outsiders
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Photographs of Sambia by
anthropologists
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Northern Renaissance witch paintings
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Medieval Church carvings
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Eroticised Objects
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Sambia flutes
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Sailors’ uniforms and leather
motorcycle gear
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Props from Greek vase paintings in
Aesthetic photography
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Japanese harikata
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Products of Sexual Minorities
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X
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Berdache textiles
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Harmony Hammond’s sculptures
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X
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Table 1: A table from
Reed showing relationships of art to different concepts of homosexuality
(2011:8)
Reed’s (2011) book attempts to plot different concepts of
homosexuality found in its historians with modes of art that have varying
relationships to these concepts. His views (with examples of the art he uses in
the book) are summarised in the Table, together with a very personal set of
terms to name his categories in each case. What remains clear is that
homosexuality, though varying in terms of conceptualisation, is recognisable as
an entity within each concept. Reed performs here a sleight of hand that is
precisely involved in rescuing the tern ‘homosexual’ from any fundamental
deconstruction such as that attempted by Sedgwick Kosofsky in The Epistemology of the Closet. In her
formulation, the retention of this term by necessity imports the dualism in
which the terms heterosexual and homosexual define each other. More importantly
it fixes the latter term as ‘the other’ in terms of some kind of priority, of
quality or quantity to the former. Hence to be ‘a homosexual’ is to be a
quantitative minority or possess a less normative sexual identity. This blog is
written in order to ask myself and anyone else who will comment whether we need
accept or not that the term ‘homosexual’ is a valid term and whether it
necessitates the sequelae that follow on from it according to Kosofsky Sedgwick.
One concern I have is that using the term retrospectively
and using it to colour the future, probably oversimplifies the situation in
both cases. When used of the past it is used to stereotype somewhat, as we
often see in the case of minbor figures like Horace Walpole and Thomas Gray in
the eighteenth century, even by Schama but of more concern, even in Saslow. In both cases Walpole as both odd
and possessing an understanding of himself inferior to ours. The issues when we
deal with other cultures may even be greater.
Reed’s table does introduce a column based on performative
theory (after Judith Butler) definitions but applies it only to post-modernism
in effect or to instances where theatrical metaphor was already a part of the
art concerned, as in Japanese Tokugawa prints, with their interest in the
different between appearance and meaning – which they often exploited by using
calligraphy to textualise pictures just as pictures visualised calligraphic
patterns.
I’d like to be able to insist that ‘queer’ alternatives
exist whenever conventions in a picture are multiple, mixed and sometimes
contradictory – when viewers have to make choices to find a repertoire of
meanings. If queer and performance theory stress that identity is a choice,
Reed feels that this almost nullifies the voice of a group who existed trans-historically,
whenever they happened to be named and who, in the name of justice and truth,
need identifying in earlier avatars (classical, medieval and Renaissance).
My own prejudice at the moment is that ‘hunting the
homosexual’ is a thankless sport, and like all hunting is, in the end, cruel. I
wince when I read the descriptions of the Aesthetic movement in Saslow for
instance just as I do those of Horace Walpole. We objectify short-sighted views
here, making Pater and Wilde laughable (and sad) clowns. It also confines gay
art-history to the closet or the ghetto. Queer perspectives have a lot to say
about heterosexual image-making – Bonnard and Caillebotte for instance, as well
as more obviously the more performative Picasso. They are not the same as LGBT+
identities because they are only chosen over a deeper determining structure –
but one that is less known than anyone thinks (and maybe interactional between
determinations). But we can still choose to accept or reject the appearance of
the current cultural forms of those identities. Chinese, Japanese and Indian art
was particularly good at this before the colonialists took a hand it appears.
Unfinished thoughts.
Steve