‘A Kind of Love-as-Violence, and Violence-as-Love’: Jenkin Van Zyl’s Looners (2019), gendered violence and pleasure in performance art

dc.cclicenceCC-BY-NCen
dc.contributor.authorCurtis, Harriet
dc.date.accessioned2023-04-18T10:10:47Z
dc.date.available2023-04-18T10:10:47Z
dc.date.issued2021-04-14
dc.descriptionThis paper was given as part of the Association for Art History conference (14-17 April 2021) at the University of Birmingham (online) as part of a panel titled 'Toxic masculinity (Classical to Contemporary)'.en
dc.description.abstractFeatured in the Hayward Gallery exhibition Kiss My Genders, British artist Jenkin Van Zyl’s epic film Looners (2019) depicts a fantastical ritual of violence and abandonment in a complex of decaying film sets in the Atlas Mountains. Described in part as ‘a deliberate queering of the macho history of violence’, the film address ‘the violence that is regularly committed against non-conforming bodies’, and seeks to reinstate pleasure and bodily excess firmly within the celebratory, bacchanalian realm (Hayward 2019). However, the film also speaks to the work of male performance artists in the 1970s and 1980s – such as Paul McCarthy and John Duncan – who explored gender fluidity, (usually heterosexual) sex, and bodily excess, in messy (physically and politically), violent, and sometimes problematic, troubling, and unethical ways. In Duncan’s piece For Women Only (1979), an audience of women are shown pornographic films and then invited into a back room abuse the artist; in Blind Date (1980), Duncan made a sound recording of a sexual encounter with a female corpse, a piece which he describes as an act of ‘self-torture’ (Duncan 1997). This paper will expand on points of connection and contention between representations of violence and pleasure in Duncan and Van Zyl’s work, and ask how Looners might rehearse or revise a history of gendered or ‘masculinised’ violence whilst seeking to reclaim the agency and autonomy of the body in ways that are ultimately hopeful.en
dc.funderNo external funderen
dc.identifier.citationCurtis, H. (2021) A Kind of Love-as-Violence, and Violence-as-Love’: Jenkin Van Zyl’s Looners (2019), gendered violence and pleasure in performance art. Association for Art History conference (14-17 April). University of Birmingham/Online, UK.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2086/22699
dc.language.isoenen
dc.researchinstituteInstitute of Drama, Dance and Performance Studiesen
dc.subjectperformanceen
dc.subjectmasculinityen
dc.subjectviolenceen
dc.subjectpleasureen
dc.subjectqueer theoryen
dc.subjectgenderen
dc.title‘A Kind of Love-as-Violence, and Violence-as-Love’: Jenkin Van Zyl’s Looners (2019), gendered violence and pleasure in performance arten
dc.typeConferenceen

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