Pages on This Blog: Works and Documentation

Wednesday 24 November 2021

Let’s Play Tag: The Impossibility of Porn as Performance Art in the Mind of Someone Lusting

(Additional: This article was written before I found the essay on pornographic tagging, namely 'Deep Tags' by Antoine Mazières, Mathieu Trachman, Jean-Philippe Cointet, Baptiste Coulmont & Christophe Prieur - which will go on to inform further thoughts in this area. Another retrospectively relevant article is 'Microporn in the Digital Media Age' by Joseph Brennan, which examines the consumption of out-of-context clips from longer works.)

The risk of having any work that explicitly displays the human form being re-appropriated by viewers for more salacious ends is, of course, ever-present, as Linda Neade reminds us, quoting Lucy Lippard:

A woman using her own face and body has a right to do what she will with them, but it is a subtle abyss that separates men’s use of women for sexual titillation from women’s use of women to expose that insult.” (Lippard, ‘Pains & Pleasures’, From the Center: 125). Nead herself adds: “Women who used their bodies in performance art could easily be reappropriated for the purposes of male sexual arousal” (Nead, ‘The Female Nude’, Routledge, 1992, p.67). Nowhere is this made clearer than on the public porn site which employed me in 2020, www.Xhamster.com, where uploaded clips of nude performance art, mainstream cinema and television works, ballet, and even grand opera may be found buried under a plethora of tags which reduce all these works to their barest (pun intended) essentials – the idea that any naked (or partially so) female body is fair game.

Whilst seeking to counter viewer expectations of what this genre of work ought to depict, a browse through the tags applied to images and videos on any porn site can and will reveal that almost anything can or will be somebody's fetish – and will be enthusiastically shared with others of the same mind. The fascination with these fine details and the need to collect them is not reserved purely for material intended only to titillate. Spend five minutes browsing films intended for adults (as distinct from 'adult films') listed on movie review site www.imdb.com and study the tags which users apply to films for relevant, or interesting, content. To take one example1, the 2010 remake of the 1970s exploitation feature 'I Spit on Your Grave' – a film which portrays a vicious gang-rape, followed by the victim's equally brutal revenge – users have provided, among many others (200+ in fact), the following helpful index of salient features:

female nudity”, “sexual humiliation”, “arms tied overhead”, “sodomy”, “forced to strip”, “public sex”, “outdoor sex”, “woman stripped from waist down”, “video voyeurism”, “clothes torn off”, “panty sniffing”, “shotgun sodomy”, “public nudity”, “gun in anus”, “female star appears nude” and “nipples visible through clothing”2,

almost all of which (barring the obvious violent tags) are themselves categories and tags on any standard porn website, rather than aspects of a mainstream Hollywood feature that went on to spawn two further sequels to date. To take a very different example on imdb, 'Schindler's List', we find the tags: 'female nudity', both 'male' and 'female' in 'full frontal nudity' and 'pubic hair', and 'bare breasts' – somewhat more detail, I feel, than is necessary in warning viewers to the presence of potentially adult material (where 'strong', moderate' or 'mild' classifications of sex, violence, nudity etc. generally suffices on DVD and Blu-Ray sleeves), as if the grim true-life theme was not more troubling. In a final example, the 1993 Robert Altman comedy/drama 'Short Cuts', the top of the list of 'most relevant' tags are almost exclusively pertaining to female nudity and sex:

 



Out of the top 38 “most relevant” tags for that film (accessed 9/10/21) – see https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108122/keywords?ref_=tt_stry_kw – 30 of them refer specifically to fetishistic or sexual elements, many of which tags, again, are also very commonplace on pornographic media. My point is that when works of non-pornographic intent such as this (though possibly still informed by the dominant patriarchal gaze defined by Mulvey) can be regarded by some users in a pornographic context and appropriated as such, the rhizomatic nature and structure of the male gaze and its pornographizing function is made evident: 3 out of 4 visitors to the imdb.com page for 'Short Cuts' deemed the tag 'no panties' to be relevant to a film of 150 minutes running time, chronicling the daily lives of multiple characters and stories. An alien visitor to our world, attempting to analyse such data, would be inclined to draw the conclusions that 'real' pornography was non-existent in human society and could only be 'sneaked in' to otherwise serious, mainstream works. Or put another way: those few seconds of clips which can be viewed in that manner, have already cropped up on pornographic video websites, alongside mainstream action as well as installation works by Vanessa Beecroft tagged as ‘public female nudity’, and have probably motivated the viewers of those clips to pass on their enthusiasm via the imdb.com tagging system.

The conclusions we can draw from these examples is that as anything can be fetishized, so too can any material, even with innocent intention, be sexualized, and sought out as such – what I refer to now as the ‘pornographizing gaze’. While this may perhaps not be news, the extent of its pervasiveness may be surprising. Where this is relevant to my current line of questioning, is in the ability for a user’s gaze to ‘pornographize’ or acquire the form of another, for purely sexual purposes, whether or not that is the intention of the individual, or media, under scrutiny. I have never actually (yet) thrown a drink in anyone’s face for up-front asking me in a nightclub what kind of genitalia I have under my dress (finding fear of a rapidly escalating situation to be the greater part of valour), but in the world of porn all things are permitted (within legal and website limitations) and all bodies potentially desirable. Desirability cannot be measured or quantified: let’s recall the pre-internet pornographic niches of ‘older’, ‘larger’, ‘pregnant’, ‘Asian’, ‘black’, ‘cross-dressed’, ‘obese’, ‘midget’ etc. subjects which go back decades and were catered to in material which was often classified as ‘obscene’ in the US and the UK due – I can only suspect – entirely to its associations with the grotesque and therefore its place outwith the accepted hetero-normative body ideal. That online pornography is now helping to flatten those distinctions cannot be denied, even if still within something of a fetishistic framing – at least the performers and models can no longer feel so marginalised as having their bodies stamped as ‘obscenities’ by government hands, and those who sell the publications which paid them, prosecuted. The problems exist, as I have found out myself, when those persons who own those ‘alternative’ bodies expect to be treated as persons, outside of any fetishistic, pornographizing system of sexual classification – and by virtue of simply being what they are, are conflated with objects of desire and titillation in other contexts. If a movie depicting a gang-rape and revenge on the perpetrators can entice viewers seeking hints of bondage, public humiliation and aggressive sexual activity, then it is no wonder why people in public places find themselves continually cornered and expected to play the roles which have been, in the minds of the gazers, thrust upon them. I understand this involves a paradigm shift in male-centric thinking, and along with my previous post’s suggestion that people quit judging others by arbitrary physical or facial features, I am asking far too much of the majority of the world’s population who think and act in these ways. But we must find somewhere to start.


1Chosen precisely because of its troubling subject matter, sexual violence (though nowhere as intense or graphic as the 1979 original 'video nasty') and contemporary attitude to such issues.

2Not all the violent content tagged thus is, of course, directed against the central female character, as her revenge on the male rapists is eye-watering, and other tags do refer to this – but the implication remains that users, irrespective of their motives, gender, sexuality or expectations, seemingly seek out, or wish to share, such very specific details of filmic content, and that a large number of these focus on prurient minutiae. 

 


Sunday 21 November 2021

Losing Face

 "I need feminization surgery..." is a common statement (or motif) I see occasionally on social media from trans acquaintences and others on the spectrum.

"Why?" I think. To which the answer is, usually, fair enough, along these lines: "So I don't get misgendered, made to feel invalid, like I haven't left my assigned-at-birth gender, or feel humiliated".

But - as I see it - this is buying into the problem, which is the persistance of oppressive modes of judgement, of assumption, of prejudice, which not only enable the general population to perpetuate their assumptions, but convince others that they 'cannot be' or 'cannot look like' their new gender without conforming to those prejudices and stereotypical Ways of Seeing. Because obviously, a woman with a heavy jawline cannot be a real woman - or if she is, then she must be a lesbian, as she's unluckily configured contrary to the Western aesthetic acceptance of what 'feminine' physiognomy must be. This goes beyond mere 'standards' of beauty (which of course are fluid, and shift from one generation, and one era, to the next) but a far more insidious level of deep-coding which seems to infect, in a seemingly rhizomatic manner, almost every aspect of aesthetic discourse, from popular to academic media.

As Shon Faye summarizes, "...many trans people consider body shape, facial hair, voice and facial features to be much more important [than genital surgery] in daily life, allowing their true gender to be recognized by others." * Coming across this line in a cutting-edge, published-this-year title of incredible importance, made me stop and think that we still have light years to travel yet in breaking out of the restrictive socio-cultural systems of perception and judgement which self-perpetuate both in the viewer, and in the viewed subject - and how those subjects feel obliged to present themselves back. We haven't even begun to scratch at the surface of alternative physiognomies yet, in which any cis gendered woman with even the faintest trace of facial hair must be read in negative, or mocking, terms - or, at least, assumed unequivically to be queer - as though physiognomies must conform to some archetypal schematic, much as physical bodies seemingly do to their signified representatives on the public doors marked 'ladies' and 'gentlemen'. Such radical divergences tend to enter the realms of what are termed 'abject' (Kristeva), 'grotesque' (Bakhtin, Stallybrass & White) or simply socially unacceptable
**.

This is a subject which has pre-occupied me since the end of the second year of undergrad study (2017), and has continually informed my own shifting sense of personal presentation - and how happier I am at looking 'more' ambiguous, and in putting out work which deliberately challenges these ingrained attitudes. "Don't judge by appearances" runs the boring old cliché - yet all of us do, every single day, every time we meet someone for the first time. We need a radical new way of looking at people, literally without prejudice, without assumption, and without assigning gendered attributes to random, arbitrary features and forms.

*Shon Faye, 'The Transgender Issue: an Argument for Justice', Allen Lane, 2021, p. 86

**As I note elsewhere (in my undergrad dissertation), see such opinions as "RJ Coady’s critique of Constantin Brancusi’s 1916 sculpture Princess X...[as] a 'deliberate attempt to do something different, and not in the manner of the big and great but in the spirit of the short-haired lady and the long-haired man'". 

Thursday 18 November 2021

Camera Obscena: Reflections on being on the public side of a pornographic lens


Chronologically, this should probably have been the first post on this blog, being a reflection on the origins of the current stream of research. But that would have required some desire to present the ongoing narrative in a strict, orderly timeline – as it stands, this is simply a repository of thoughts, ideas, reflections and connections. The research is only weeks old. Order and sequencing will come later.

 


Coronavirus in the summer of 2020 changed a lot of things – not least of which, my job prospects for earning essential money over the break between my graduating with BA Hons. from DJCAD in May and commencing the MFA course at the same institution (originally to have been September, but later postponed to October). With no degree shows to hire me in my usual role as tour guide (and of course I wouldn’t have been able to work my own graduate show anyway), I had to think – and act – quickly to pursue an alternative line of employment – one that would be stable and regular, but also involve minimal setup costs and travel.

Internet sex work wasn’t exactly the top of my preferred list of options, but a number of contributing factors made it so, chief among which were those listed above, as well as the assurances from a couple of close online friends that, as a genderqueer performance artist with few personal inhibitions, a very long-standing interest in traditional striptease, burlesque and exotic performance (from about the age of seven or so, the same age at which I began to discover my own feminine identity) and who had read my one professionally-published novel which relates the memoirs of a 1970s female stripper1, I should find it easy and untroubling.

I was recommended to try my hand with Xhamster.com – a huge internet pornographic outfit whose main public face is free, user-uploaded content – video and photographic – but also caters to live, streaming interactive webcam performance. Camera broadcasts may be viewed for free by registered users, but they are encouraged to spend dollars with the site on tokens, which may be used to ‘tip’ performers, as in traditional nightclub acts, request specific actions (or interactions) and pay for special treats like private time with the performer. The site exchanges dollars for a number of tokens, whilst taking a cut from each transaction. Signing up as a performer cost nothing but required photographic ID to be submitted. I was sceptical about this, but in the end overcame my fears and reservations by weighing up the worst-case scenario of a massive online data breach and possible ID theft (cf. Sony 2012) against the likelihood of being singled out from the millions of other users subscribed to the site. It was the internet, and the sense of ‘being someone else’ online from as early as 1992 which gradually fostered my alternative persona as a genuine being in the world, rather than an inner construct and projection, and ultimately nourished the confidence which allowed me to step out in public2. It took me a week to have my personal documents validated and by the end of April, Ms Lilith was born3

 


 

Within a week, I was feeling the effects of my new job as tangibly as the fictional heroine I had created seven years before in my novel: working four, five nights a week left me fatigued, craving R & R, and occasionally having to do exactly what she did on her days off: soak my feet in salted bowls of hot water to relieve the callouses caused by hours of dancing and posing in 5” heels. By going live at around 10pm and working through to 4, 5 a.m or later, I was able to cross two calendar days in one session which would allow me the rest of the day off (assuming I had made some tokens from the experience) without affecting my potential score on the performers leaderboard - which in the early days was something I cared about. (My highest point was being raked number 31 within my first few days - no doubt due to me being flagged as a ‘new’ performer and therefore highly visible. Once I became ‘old hat’, that rating plunged, as I was unable to maintain the peak interest shown in me.) Working five calendar days a week, whilst preparing for my Honours assessment during evening times, pushed my physical/mental stamina to its limit, and during daylight hours I would often take advantage of sunshine by working in the garden, too.

Like any kind of sex work, good results can be down to luck as much as any particular effort on the part of the operator: one can spend over an hour getting primped and dressed in the most glamorous fashion, carefully matching styles and accessories, only to sit in an empty room for half the night with little or no interest – whilst conversely, a hasty grab-bag of minimal garments from the bottom drawer elicit ecstasies in those who just happen to admire the cheap, trashy look, and fling batches of tokens around like confetti in response. Or the layers of carefully-applied glamour may be literally stripped off in a moment, as by one of my first ever ‘private’ clients who exhorted, “Strip off. Everything...4

The ontological experience of cramming oneself into a 640x480 pixel window is strange in many ways, for other than disparities in actual monitor size at the client end, what we see of ourselves in that window is exactly what others see as well. It is a mirror, but one which does not present us with a reflected image – it is the image of the self as seen by the Other, and as the Other is invited to seek sexual pleasure in that image, so we may also, ourselves, entertain that notion, as we become linked to that Lacanian object of fascination, desire, and ego-building. In fact, any exotic dancer, stripper or burlesque performer needs to carry a healthy amount of narcissism to look as if they are enjoying the experience. The dynamics of performer/audience in traditional hetero-normative work such as this is well documented – what is less so, is the marginalised area of gay, trans and queer generally performance. The image which links viewer (or voyeur) and webcam performer – becomes the shared object of attention, that to which the viewer reacts and through which we also construct our own performative self, continually adjusting movements, expressions, poses based upon the ongoing visual feedback, and – as I have often found in the past via my mainstream video and performative work – viewing this image of the Self as Other, making the webcam interaction a triangular symbiosis between performer – performative image – viewer. The true notion of Self can become somewhat detached as if, in an infantile Lacanaian way, we invest and immerse ourselves in the image on-screen rather than the experience of being, expressing unity of visual with interiority – the stage where surface overcomes depth and we reduce ourselves to mere Object status, the common anti-pornographic complaint of 1960s feminists. Dressed in seductive clothing, especially various forms of lingerie, is a rather uncomfortable experience (we can assume that most such items were designed by men for women to wear), which is why I rarely have entertained it, but the visual and aesthetic charge is powerful enough to make it worthwhile, as in the manner of birds’ plumage and other animals’ sexually attractive performances and displays of colour and form. Certain designs of boots, for example, are commonly described as “only for the bedroom” - meaning that their practical function can barely venture beyond that of sexual arousal.

 


 

Working online in this manner, with my self literally in focus at all times, reminded me of the paradox inherent in Foucault’s socio-cultural construction of ‘man’ - as a subject which views itself in the world and experiences direct relationship with the world (in my case, through the interface of the website), and simultaneously as an object of study and knowledge within the world and hence, Janus-like, looks inward and outward simultaneously. The Sartrian model of the Other as the sculptor of the Self was also, I found, given tangible credence: viewers who advised me that I was “sexy”, “gorgeous” or any number of other preposterous (so I thought) adjectives quickly began to convince me that I was – at any rate, to them, even if I myself knew how sketchy the makeup really was, how tangled the showgirl wig was at the back, or how insecure the showgirl themselves was inside. Those who deemed me sexy very often proved the veracity of their claims by spending their tokens on me, sometimes for quite simple and unrevealing gestures or requests. “Wish I was with you right now,” was a common trope. My answer was originally, “If you were, you’d lose your illusion,” - finding honesty easier than acceptance of blind praise. Before long though, I realised that it was easiest – and kinder, too – to simply accept the wild flattery and play the part they wanted me to play. In this sense, also, I felt the subtle presence of Barthes’ use of language as a skin – where the mere words of others, linguistic notation on a screen, helped to move me in the manner in which their writers desired, and which I myself therefore found desirable, by being able to respond in kind – which, in turn, would then inspire further eloquence on the part of the viewer. Using their “words instead of fingers, or fingers at the tip of [their] words5”, I found myself moved, inspired and often aroused – creating a mutual feedback loop of call and response.

When one is on a stage, in front of an audience, one doesn’t know how the performance looks from the viewer’s point of view, and only rehearsals can assure one that the movements can well approximate how we want the event to be perceived. But we cannot imagine how the performance may be seen from every possible angle – how views from the gallery differ from those at the front of the stage, or in the wings. Certain gestures may be more discernible from some angles rather than others. In a live webcam environment, there is only one flat view which we control, and only by moving the camera itself can shift the angle of perception. In this situation the viewer is often the director, critic and audience in one. We might enjoy a greater or lesser degree of autonomy during what I tend to call the “attract mode” (striking poses or instigating a sequence or scene for the benefit of viewer traffic passing through the room, in the hope some will be attracted enough to stay and engage in conversation, or more) – the “trailer”, “advert” or “teaser”. But with sufficient interest (and arousal) on the part of the viewer, they may then feel inclined to suggest modify or derail the performer’s current mode of performance. “Why don’t you show this”, “Stand up”, “I want to see you full length”, “Let’s see you do...” etc., thereby creating an interactive, improvisational experience in which neither the performer nor the audience knows entirely what may happen next – whether the outcome, or its method of formation.

My own personal rules for what would constitute a successful striptease or sex scene might run as follows: It must not look cheap, or tacky (or if it does then it had better at least be funny – on purpose); it must build a discernible curve of tension and relief, ideally starting out with performers fully-clothed and ending with inevitable full nudity; appropriate music should set the scene and help to build the suspense, as well as fuel the performer’s movements and interest in the performance (I.e no inappropriate dubbing after the fact); a good variety of camera angles and shots should be employed, from full-length long shots to close-ups, facial shots (to carry the details of the performer’s emotion to the viewer, and to help make eye-contact – a vital component of any kind of live performance that requires audience connection). As a film-maker, I had to bear all of this in mind as I also went about the business of trying to be so sexually alluring and entertaining for audiences, that they were willing to spend good money on the experience to see more of me, as well as ensure a continuing soundtrack to keep myself motivated and raise my game when required (the site requires all performers to have a working microphone on at all times)6.

 


I am completely removed from the common fetishistic obsession with the materiality of lingerie and other items, and sensations provided to the wearer (usually with fantasies – or realities – of extreme submissiveness) without consideration of the emancipatory nature of such gear – cf. Paglia’s assertion that a “woman’s most powerful weapon is a stiletto heel”. This, to me, suggests a patriarchal construction of how the idealized female ought to be, and they themselves inhabit that form in pursuit of their own sexualized agenda. Materiality of clothing is irrelevant to me (other than, for example, certain substances I simply can’t wear – e.g latex, PVC, which have terrible tactile sensations to me, and look cheap too) – it’s the outer look, not the inner sensation, which interests me, the self-as-other – objectifying myself not to the level of a sexually repressive fetishistic figure but to the female – not ‘feminized’ in the fetishistic sense – within me which felt connected more as the ‘other half’ of my male side and hence embodied or completed my androgyny of being/spirit. For myself, a certain primal aggression is at work – channelled through a dialectically opposed conduit of archetypal figures which recur eternally within my own work (both written, visual and performative) – the Amazon, the valkyrie, the witch, in all her dark and worrying aspects – the challenging, blatant, openness of female sexuality, inviting, yet also ultimately devouring and destroying, embodying the pagan Goddess in my own way.

As Foucault noted elsewhere: “BDSM is sexualized power”, and the dominance/submission dynamic soon became very clear and obvious in the public room as well as in private sessions. Some men assumed me to be dominant from the word go, perhaps due in part to my imposing stature and enthusiasm for leather boots, and requested I act as such upon them (“topping from the bottom”, as it were – or, not knowing your role in the D/s relationship); others were equally keen to assert their dominance on me, attitudes which might as readily make me produce the riding crop and segue the current music into ‘Venus in Furs’, as make me actually seek to comply (depending on my mood, and the status of the user – might they be likely to pay for more of the same?). As just stated, there soon developed a miniature cultural trichotomy within my relationships with users, one already put in place by the site. Grey-coloured users are registered but have never bought tokens with which to buy media or tip performers; green users have tokens which can be spent (but will eventually be used up, and revert their status to grey, but with the ‘ex-green’ status); and gold users, the élite, pay a monthly membership fee to enjoy varied benefits. This description alone ought to clearly illustrate the pyramid structure of the online membership, and the colour status of a user is, of course, a determinant in how much attention the performer ought to pay to them when tips are at stake. Personally, I find it mannerly to return compliments with gratitude no matter who they may be from, but rudeness or demands will find my attention quickly diverting elsewhere – no matter what the status of the user. Greys issuing curt commands (“Show your -”, “Do this, do that”) would just be ignored, whereas those with actual funds would be told, “All things come to those who tip” or, one occasion which saw the recipient head straight for the exit after a tedious barrage of requests, “If you ain’t tipping, I ain’t stripping”. Occasionally, some would put their money where their demands were, and a proftable exchange would open up – more often than not, they would get the hump and leave, obviously upset at having been made to look cheap in public (or else deeming me, to misquote Dr. Johnson, “Worth seeing, but not worth paying to see”). Greens and golds entering the room would elicit the online equivalent of the streetwalker flashing her coat open at the sight of an approaching Porsche or Ferrari – which might often screech past her to the younger, or prettier, colleague three hudred yards down the road7. I soon tried not to make my reactions look too transparant, like jumping up from a reclined pose to immediately start strutting the floor like a Las Vegas showgirl (and huffing to an abrupt stop as the Green or Gold disappeared as swiftly as they arrived). Once the novelty of being out in public in a live, paying erotic environment had become normalized in my psyche, I began to use the experience as an exercise in psychology - studying the actions of users and figuring out their potential intentions (usually when nobody was chatting, or saying anything of interest). Sometimes a green would sit in the room, silent, lurking; as though hoping for another green or gold to enter and drop some tips which they were themselves not so willing to part with. Often, the same green would leave and then return five, ten, minutes later, seemingly to check if anything had changed – most of my tip ‘goals’ (a certain action being performed publicly when a set number of tips had been received) involved removing items of clothing in a very protracted striptease, on an escalating pay scale – a skirt might be worth 8 or 10, a G-string 30 (or even 50 if I wasn’t wearing that much to begin with) – so I understood their psychology for wanting to be around to see only the later adult-rated ‘good stuff’ rather than having to pay to get me through the PG-rated underwear level first. Understanding, however, does not equate with appreciation.

The bulk of my earnings came from private sessions, which I had fixed at 16 tokens/minute (a token being worth $0.05) – half of the default value. I cared for quantity and customer retention over extortion. My longest session ran almost two hours one night, and almost single-handedly took my balance from $0 to $100 (the magical threshold for triggering automatic wire payments) in the space of an evening. Rather like being in a hotel room with a client, one is, to an extent, rather at their mercy – they are paying after all, and unless they’re asking for something illegal (either to the site hosts, or in actual law) then I found it easiest just to comply – as long as it didn’t involve crossing any of my personal lines, making a mess of good clothing or compromising my own safety. I had it clearly stated on my profile which actions I do publicly, and which I do in private, so anything outwith that range would therefore need to be at least discussed. Quitting from a private session for any reason other than verbal abuse or illegal intent would probably be frowned upon, as users can vote the performer afterwards, and a negative vote would upset the performer’s overall ranking (it took me from May until mid-September to get enough votes on my private shows to actually show up – but when it finally came, it was a perfect 5/5 from 10 votes). I much preferred speaking in privates than public – if only because in a public room you cannot tell who can hear – and the erotic potential of live talk cannot be underestimated, to those who appreciate such. Americans especially found my identifiable Scottish accent ‘sexy’, which I found highly entertaining – given my long-standing hatred of hearing my own voice until very recent times, when I first started public spoken word performances (in September 2019) and as a result, began to modulate my speech patterns and focus on clarity of pronunciation.

The analogy of striptease to my own work was found to be misleading, if not entirely false. While it is the one activity (along with dancing, whether erotic or otherwise) in which I would most gladly participate for an adult audience (for many reasons), it was something I was able to perform less than I would have liked. The advantage of a club is that the audience is static – they are there, you are on stage, and the only variables are how many are interested enough in you at any time to throw money your way to see more. In a webcam room, nobody pays for entry, so traffic can be busy, dead, or non-existent. Before long, a performative paradox arose in my mind whenever the population of the room dwindled to zero: “Is nobody coming in because I’m not doing anything interesting? But, I’m not doing anything interesting, because there’s nobody coming in...” The idea of parading around the room in mad self-absorption, with no actual viewership to see, felt antithetical, if not farcical. Sometimes I did anyway when a particular favourite song came on, and I was in the mood anyway. Too often than not I found myself reclined in the chair, trying not to look as if I was paying too much attention to the screen, whilst still also exhibiting some layer of enticement for those who might wander by at a moment’s notice.

 

As time went on, my profile text became more pushy against the kind of liberties often taken by non-paying viewers

In Barthes’ essay on Striptease, “Striptease...is based on a contradiction: Woman is desexualized at the very moment when she is stripped naked”. In my case, I began to find exactly the opposite: disclosing the male anatomy to the viewing public increased the tension between viewer and viewed. Unlike the apotropaic stare of Medusa8, which Freud saw reflected in an infantile view of the mother’s genitals, my unveiling animated and galvanised those watching, liberating them from the potential fear of what they might see, only to be confronted with what they already knew well to expect: the sight of that they possessed themselves, the comforting, assuring promise that not all women had been castrated, that a sexually available and desirable feminine form may still hold no terror for the child-within by revealing ‘her’ secret: ‘she’ is just like ‘him’ - literally echoing Kipnis’ observation that pornography is a genre with “two genders but only one sex” - wherein both sets of performers yield completely and uneqivocally to each other’s needs and demands, finding total, almost divine (if not pre-Lapsarian) unity. In this case, her statement is literally true.

Barthes: “The classic props of the music hall...make the unveiled body more remote, and force it back into the all-pervading ease of a well-known rite...”

One of the advantages which the digital revolution has brought to the industry is, of course, the autonomy of the individual performer – who, no longer needing a sleazebag producer to ‘make her a star’, or even a stripclub venue to dance in, can take total control of her own career and do it her way, on her terms, at times that suit her and with – this, I believe, being the most crucial – total personal safety, and 100% of the profits. If websites such as Xhamster can offer anybody (Male, Female or Trans) a guaranteed 100% cut of the token tips spent on their live broadcasts (as well as passive revenue earned from any additional digital content, such as explicit or specialized videos which cost a set number of tokens to view and download), all in the safety of their own homes – then anyone with photographic ID and a stable internet connection can become not just a performer but a paid performer. We might do well to remember that in the last days of the 20th Century, the first internet-specific business model to turn a profit was the pornography industry – before Amazon ever made a cent and before ‘social media’ was even a phrase. At the age of 47 (and biologically male), finding myself to be praised as not only desirable but sexually interesting left me rather bemused at first. Being physically fit helped a great deal – comments on the “killer abs” and “amazing legs” helped get me off on the right foot, and I realised quickly that the limited resolution of the camera helped to mitigate surface blemishes (body stubble, sketchy makeup) and present a much cleaner image than I knew was actually in front of that camera. Of course, viewers also saw what they wanted to see - if their initial perception was of a 25-year old knockout 6-foot blonde in 5” heels, then no amount of self-deprecating honesty from my direction (“I’m actually old enough to be your parent”) would be likely to dislodge those hooks of sexual desire, once embedded in the Id of the captivated viewer. Self-appointed ‘straight guys’ told me on various occasions I had forced them to reconsider their sexuality – I didn’t dare ask what they were doing trawling through the ‘Trans’ section of a very popular website when there were hundreds of perfectly fine cisgendered female broadcasters presenting themselves in the default broadcasters’ screen9 at the time, for their alleged straightness. As I have said elsewhere10, “any inclusion is better than exclusion” and if a person like me can go some way towards normalizing an alternative object of desire – whether it be a non-binary body, or in the case of others, coloured, Latino, disabled or other marginalized bodies and beings – then my work is worth more than the hundreds of pounds it brought me over the summer – it has helped to sow the very seeds of the purpose of almost all of my academic and creative work since 2017, that of raising awareness and recognition of the non-élite form, the marginalised body, the Bakhtinian grotesuque, through my own post-modernist levelling of the high-low cultural dichotomy. To interrupt, interrogate the bastion of heteronormativity, pornography – albeit couched in the ‘Trans’ section of a specific website – was a project more than worthy, especially as I did so on my terms – refuting the full-on hardcore activities of many others (often Latins, with Colombians featuring in at least half of the top ten trans performers at any time). That many no doubt viewed me as a fetishized curio was inevitable; but I brought my own standards, my own personal rules to the game, and played them with those willing to participate with me. My strength of personality occasionally pushed a little far – but if I were ever in any danger of think for a moment that some guys can just be too stupid, too insensitive, too - for words, I only had to consider how much more trans and cisgendered women would have to put up with (and throughout normal life as well). That I might have denigrated, debased myself for money, never once entered my mind – such moral accusations tend to be the domain of those for whom morality is an absolute, an immovable standard set apart from the needs of life and earning a wage (for example, would trans women of colour in the United States and elsewhere put themselves at critical risk of assault, abuse and murder if they had another option to earn a wage?). ‘Sex work’11 itself is mere work, as valid as any other form, and I have strongly supported (for years) those brave people who undertake it, subject as they are to the threat of violence. As Angela carter notes in The Sadeian Woman, “Violence, the convulsive form of the active, male principle, is a matter for men, whose sex gives them the right to inflict pain as a sign of mastery and the masters have the right to wound one another because that only makes us fear them more...” (pp. 25 – 26). Pornography, them being socially relegated to the lowest stratum of culture, is therefore irredeemable by default – unclassifiable as art, worthless to any but the lowest, without any consideration of those who not only choose to – but those who have to – earn a living from it. By joining that community I felt, in a small way, proud at having shared a lived experience which is a way of life for millions around the world. If anything, I felt that, occasionally, I was the one denigrating others – appealing to their lowest instincts in order to prise from them a desirable amount of tips in order to call the session ‘satisfactory’ or ‘profitable’ - the spectre of the neoliberalist nightmare of the 1980s was not far from my shoulder, a skeletal Gordon Gekko whispering that “greed is good” and encouraging me to empty the latest user’s token account for all I was worth, by doing, or saying, whatever it was they wanted from me. Exploitation, especially in a free-market environment as on the Internet, can cut both ways. But if I could give a paying user a good time, “a night’s worth of great dreams” as I was sometimes told, or just a worthwhile way to let off sexual energy for that night, then my work was done, and it was good – for all concerned, insofar as the position of people like me is a consequence of the global neoliberal agenda of the 80s in the first place. The user is given a safe and guilt-free environment in which to release pent-up desire; the performer is equally safe in her house, often hundreds if not thousands of miles away; the financial transaction is clean and automatic; nobody is hurt and nobody has to freeze or get soaked in the street, or risk verbal or other abuse from strangers. If things get too much we simply hit the ‘block’ button or stop broadcasting (or viewing).

1Originally published as ‘Phoenyx: Flesh & Fire’ by Pink Flamingo in 2014, republished in a fully revised format by Extasy Books in 2018 as ‘Berlin Girls’. The book was ostensibly written as a joke, as I had never tackled ‘erotica’ in any form before. It ended up as a rather serious and personal fantasia on a vanished world, not just the days of more ‘innocent’ adult entertainment (striptease/burlesque) but of the European Cold War situation itself.

2My personal story – filmed as, I hope, something of an inspiration to others - ‘Beyond 100 Days’

3I had toyed with using the non-gender specific title ‘Mx’ but reckoned the subtlety – and meaning – would be lost on many users. Besides, the ‘Ms’ itself already hinted at personal independence, and placed me more directly in the ‘feminine’ spotlight, the socio-cultural area I’m most used to inhabiting.

4Everything’ involved hastily unlacing a pair of calf-high patent stiletto boots (which took about five minutes to lace up only minutes before), ditching suspender belts and associated hosiery, bra, padding and button-up top. The gloves and hat were allowed to stay. I had offered him the option of disconnecting and rejoining me when I’d actually managed to get out of it all, but he was happy to stand by, saying it helped to build suspense, although he was in no mood for a tease and requested I be quick about it. In such a case it was definitely the promise of what lay beneath, rather than the outer plumage itself, which got his attention. This became a regular customer who had a very specific physical pose and position which he requested each time – by the third session I knew exactly what to do and was praised for knowing what he liked (the unquestioning submission to the Other’s will, on my part, being, no doubt, a strong part of the appeal – knowing he had ‘trained’ me to assume that specific posture which worked best for him). Submission of this sort I find easy to play, as I understand the power dynamic is two-way – one submits, willingly, to allow the other to enjoy what one’s body and being present to them.

5From A Lover’s Discourse, quoted in The Philosophy Book – p. 291

6At times, when facing the oblivion of non-interest and encroaching boredom, I would turn to music to advertise my feelings. From the usual soft rock, show tunes and occasional jazz numbers which I’d employ during actual public performances, I might instead select something by Napalm Death, and segue abruptly into a piece of Morricone or Hans Zimmer movie soundtrack – or, in the deadpan style of a late-night radio DJ, announce the next tune as ‘something to help you all get ready for bedtime’, and promptly blast a chunk of Motorhead through the microphone. The subversive appeal of music when mixed with incongruous visuals is something that has long appealed to me, and my inability to take anything 100% seriously - least of all myself – would sometimes become glaringly apparent to a no-doubt bemused and bewildered viewing audience. If I was unable to amuse others, I reasoned, then I may as well at least amuse myself.

7The correlation between the webcam work and traditional prostitution was evident in my mind even before I made my camera début – that first evening, I went to some length to ‘dress’ the entire set (the section of the room visible through the camera eye) which would be visible to any viewer. I used a dark red curtain to screen irrelevant bookcases and pictures, tacked Victorian and Edwardian pin-ups to the back of a bookcase which was turned 180 degrees to act as a touchstone for the direction from which I was coming – and used a bamboo room divider to hide other distractions such as the TV. This, of course, would be the environment in which I wanted to welcome the ‘clients’ and in tune with my invented persona for this initial series of sessions, I adopted a very retro, even Parisienne, look (also partly informed by Rita Hayworth’s legendary opera glove striptease in ‘Gilda’). To present myself in any kind of modernistic mode seemed unpalatable at the time: people were being encouraged to pay, so I hoped to give them something worth their money, and definitely something they had never been likely to see before on Xhamster. By appealing to the vintage, the traditional, I hoped to deflect the most crass and crude excesses my audience might be capable of. Within a week I realised that all of this devotion to detail was unnecessary and was not even commented upon, although it satisfied the artist/film-maker within me, and the performer in search of a character. By the end of the first few weeks I realised that the only character I was portraying was my own self, Lilith in her most devouring and independent form.

8Whether or not Freud is right on all aspects of the Medusa/castration complex, I will not argue – but the notion of the female genitalia holding an unsettling subconscious note for certain varieties of male spectator is, I feel, apparent through the history of literary, artistic and mythological symbolism – certainly when correlated with those aspects of nature and the life/death cycle explored at great length by Camille Paglia in Sexual Personae.

9Which does, of course, present female performers for an (assumed) majority hetero-normative male audience.

10''The Non-Binary Body in Western Art and Vulture', 2020 Hons. dissertation, unpublished

11A term I actually dislike – seeing it as an extension of the base concept ‘work’, as though it were somehow a less legitimate, marginal subset of that concept of labour/wage exchange.

Sunday 14 November 2021

Thoughts on Online Corporeality, and Erogenous Fragmentation

 

The body is of course objectified in webcam porn (as in any other form of that medium), but it is also fragmented, and can be mirrored in a bio-sexual feedback loop upon the viewer’s own corporeality. Following my experiences in online sex work throughout 2020, I have begun to reflect upon how I have been perceived - 'read' - by viewers over that time.
    Emphasis on the ass is frequent which, when shown, ideally in a rear view, bent over, tends to solicit very positive responses, usually quite generic, of how deep, rough or otherwise the viewer would like to penetrate it. (This is the one area I usually had to fake, having medical conditions in that specific location, and therefore any real anal activity is anathema to me). As discussed previously in the post on taxonomies and naming, a protean morphing/splicing of the anus and vagina tended to be revealed in perceptions of that specific site: á la ‘Deep Throat’ (wherein the clitoris is relocated to throat*), we find the vagina/pussy relocated to (and assimilated within) the anus – the more familiar, less troubling/complicated orifice that is, again, familiar to the male viewer, and can be discussed and fantasised upon without fear or confusion, allowing the ‘phallic female’ performer to present the fantasy of femininity without possessing the biological femaleness:



    The tits are occasionally commented upon; rarely as secondary feminine signifiers, but more in terms of the erogenous potential beneath the bra (the nipples), which viewers often request to see being played with, exposed, etc. When I inform viewers that the “tits ain't real”, most don't care whether pectorals or mammaries lie beneath. The plasticity of the body is enhanced as the user’s desires seek to be made manifest in a willing performer. I've had even a few viewers who actually encouraged me to play with the ‘breasts’ (weighted bags inside a pocket bra, giving a very realistic ‘bounce’) in the way cisfemale performers often do, though this was not common: the erogenous zone of the nipples being of much more interest, though I rarely showed these (for two reasons: I almost never shave around them, expecting them always to be covered by the bra – and also because removal of the bra, I feel, renders me more vulnerable, less feminine, and therefore closer to gendered masculinity rather than the ambiguous, but feminized, figure I prefer to project). It was not surprising to learn that not even the presence of the chest hair could diminish the enthusiasm of those who asked, suggesting that either certain aspects of masculinity can be easily ‘tuned out’ with sufficient accompanying stimulus, or else many viewers who claim ‘straight’ status are somewhat more bisexual than they may admit. If the former, then the fragmentation/reduction of the body into a number of component zones of interest becomes self-evident: while in online adult dating, shaved/smooth pubic areas are often flagged as essential (often for all genders), it seems that the presence of pubic hair in the merely visual medium is less problematic, having no tangible/physical concern for the viewer. Though my own is never shaved, I received very little negative feedback in this regard online, despite the clear preferences of many for the hairless equivalent.
    More generally the body is reduced to the one part which is shared by both performer (
in my case) and male viewer -  namely the phallus, whether mine, or theirs (what they're doing with it, how I make theirs feel, inviting me to watch them showing off theirs, and what they would like to do with theirs in terms of my body, if they had the chance). Or requesting that I do this or that specific action with mine – whether simply showing it (up close to the camera was a common desire) and often displaying great interest in its size (or perhaps how it compared to their own). In this way the phallus becomes the shared axis by which performer and viewer relate directly to each other's experience and sensation.
    Yet I also found this somewhat alienating, given that I rarely started a video chat session in any state approaching sexual excitement – a fact which often led to disappointment when I explained I wasn’t able to trigger an instant response upon demand. Conversation and the building of a scene/relationship/interest, two-way sharing of mutual interests, are what tended to get me more readily aroused, when I could sense that there would be some form of ‘audience feedback’ for what I was doing, a discussion which, I hoped, would signal approval and encouragement to continue. Simply being on show in front of any number, of mute voyeurs is of no interest to me whatsoever. Consider the cliché of the bored stripper wandering around her pole, glaring sulkily out at the bunch of equally bored men in the club or bar around her: in a live, unscripted arena, audience participation and feedback is essential. Of course, dollar bills (in the live version) or tokens (in the online environment) is the greatest form of feedback, though with it usually comes the understanding of some reciprocation – to take the current performativity to the next level, lose some clothing, or otherwise show appreciation to the tipper. My hard limit was always “No tip, no strip”, an attitude which wasn’t always appreciated – but certainly helped to kick out the timewasters.


*As an aside, feminist writer and artist Laura Kipnis discusses corporeal fantasy in an entertaining review of 'Inside Deep Throat' here. Her discussion of straight porn being a medium which "creates a fantastical world composed of two sexes but one gender...a world in which men and women were sexually alike" (L. Kipnis, 'Bound & Gagged: Pornography and the Politics of Fantasy in America', Durham NC., Duke UP, 1999, p. 200) is a cornerstone of my own investigations and experience to date, and will be revisited in future.

Friday 12 November 2021

Naming Names: Taxonomies of Ownership, or, Why You Need to Call Me That

During my six months of online adult webcam work with Xhamster.com in 2020, I learned many things about myself, but also some about other people. First and foremost was the variable lens through which I was viewed by visitors, clients and fans – a lens which adjusted according not only to the viewer’s perception of me in general, but sometimes also seemingly according to their mood, or intensity of feeling. This may not be in itself surprising – anyone who has ever been in any kind of relationship knows that partners call each other by various titles, names and appellations depending upon circumstances. My experience, however – through presenting specifically as a “trans1” Xhamster performer – allowed me to directly experience the full range of perceptions to my own self, and the names by which I was addressed directly, which in turn revealed much about their own mindsets, sexuality and attitudes. Names and titles I have been given, according to my screenshots and notes, include:

“sexy babe”, “slutty little bitch”, “beauty”, “bitchboi”, “sissy”, “sissy faggot”, “sissy boi”, “my queen”, “man”, “hot bitch”, “mistress”, “adorable princess”, “naughty bedroom girl”, “beautiful princess”, “girlfriend”, “goddess”, “my slut”, “my whore”, “cougar” and “my2 woman”. 

The broad range of terms is revealing enough, from excessively honorific to downright degrading, if not offensive, outside of their borderline acceptability in such a context. To name is to define – it is also, in the field of relationships, to define status, whether ownership, mastery, subservience or appreciation, but it also reveals the viewer/client’s reading of the performer as subject, as well as object: despite my 100% male anatomy, and the public knowledge that my appearance of breasts was entirely false, many still insisted on referring to me by purely female/feminine terms, even traditional terms of endearment, including sometimes going as far as to define me as their “girlfriend” and express desires to show me off in public, take me out socially and merely enjoy my presence3

The ratio of fantasy:reality in such statements is neither here nor there – what matters is the recurring tendency to interpret the subject in their own terms (those who did not read me approvingly, as not their ‘type’ or whatever, presumably wouldn’t hang around long enough to do so), and to reinforce that interpretation through language itself – through the naming process, which also cuts both ways (I had men desire me to call them “Daddy”, an affectation I’m uncomfortable with, irrespective of the fact that for that fantasy to risk being true, they would need to be pushing 70 years old. My very first paying client, from Israel, wanted to call me “Mommy”. Others, “Auntie”. One black American client insisted I refer to him by the ‘n’ word, which I was totally unwilling to do at first, both for personal reasons as well as those relating to the website’s terms of service, but eventually conceded - under protest -  with “Whatever works for you, man. You are paying after all...”).

In the Biblical ‘Genesis’, God’s naming of Adam and Eve denotes an act affiliated to creation. In our lives, we name children, animals, and even inanimate objects to enforce our personality, our hopes or desires, upon those recipients of names. What I took from the vast range of names I was called through this experience was that the perception of a person like me, despite being grounded in a specific aesthetic and a certain mindset, is capable of being ‘read’ and defined in myriad ways; my peculiarities, disposition and attitude often already formed and defined in the minds of Others – assumptions which are usually dashed, when I reveal no interest in buying into their roleplaying games, master/slave fancies or expectations of what kind of treatment, acts or scenes even interest me.

While I could handle the degrading feminine terms (being – perhaps disappointingly – almost expectant of such), I had more problems with terms like “boi”, “sissy” and “faggot”, for their homophobic overtones, even if the users were not intending to be offensive. It also disarmed me, I felt, in the sense that it stripped my facade down to mere biological reality – any pretence of “femininity” or occupation in the grey area between the gender poles removed and my status diminished to being just a guy with make-up on, being hustled by other guys out on a virtual cruising session or looking for a ‘quick fix’. I appreciate there’s a good deal of theoretical analysis that could be drawn out of the linguistic elements of this, but I would need to delve deeper into Derrida et al. This is perhaps a line of future enquiry.

1 Xhamster’s ‘trans’ category is a catch-all for anything not traditionally cis male or cis female. A hairy man in some lingerie would be as admissible in this category as a fully transitioned person. I always presented as fully ‘femme’ as possible, though with varying degrees of femininity – anywhere from butch biker bitch to film noir femme fatale, usually depending on mood.

 2 The possessive was a regular occurrence, not just in the more degrading terms. The need to own, to master, to have sole jurisdiction, seems to be writ large upon male thinking generally – even in the public chatroom, where others would routinely enter and converse with me, one could observe the power dynamics at work between other visitors.

3 Hard to tell if this was some form of psychological deflection, to frame me purely in feminine – hence, heterosexual – terms in order to allay lingering fears of latent queerness on the part of these users, who often identified themselves assuredly as “married”, “straight”, “just curious about trans”, etc. Other interesting variable taxonomies referred to my sexual areas, which could be defined as either wholly male, wholly female, or various hybridized portmanteau terms. In the course of this I learned a whole new anatomical lexicon: ‘pussyass’, ‘bitchcock’, ‘boipussy’, ‘manpussy’, ‘shecock’, suggesting that trans and ambiguous persons are indeed viewed as possessing ‘other’ (Othered?) forms of genitalia – again, the elaborate linguistic chicanery allowing displacement of the underlying reality that they are being turned on by what still is essentially, and biologically, a man, with the identical anatomy to themselves.


Thursday 11 November 2021

Where have all the opinions gone..?

 As discussed recently with my first supervisor, I've already encountered one of the potential stumbling blocks in this line of research: we cannot force people to react, or interact, with a work, or with anybody else. Hoping to rekindle the kind of debates and discussions on gendered aesthetics I used to have on Deviantart.com when I was a member there 2007-2017, I rejoined a month ago and posted the three images comprising the '3 Questioning Cartoons' series. Despite several hundred hits apiece, zero comments and a few likes each (which I would more than happily trade for actual feedback) are all that have been received to date.

I later posted a photographic pinup work from the first semester of my MFAAH and discovered that even the trolls now no longer have the courage of their own convictions:




Whilst getting into fiery debates about self-image, gender identity and trans rights isn't my best idea of a good time, part of the point of this research is to understand why people insist upon thinking a specific way, and the fact they continue to do so is why this research exists at all. It occurs to me that 'comment culture' and feedback have become deprecated in recent years thanks to other social media and forms of interaction, where all that matters is a single 'like' or 'dislike' click, and number of 'hits'. That, and the tendency for many to explode with fury at the slightest provocation, the mindset which sees any form of response (that is not 100% cuddly-positive) as beyond offensive and a flagrant breach of their human rights, and it's no wonder that some just choose to not enter that arena in the first place. But being in the arena, one expects to be met with furious tigers and big guys swinging swords, not tumbleweeds and distant, unanswered cat-calls.

I must be one of the few artists or internet users around who longs for the days when people just posted whatever the hell they felt like saying...all in the interests of research, of course.

Tuesday 9 November 2021

The Beginning: The Proposal

Starting at the beginning: the revised, abbreviated, and fairly rough proposal which was accepted by my supervisory team in autumn 2021, and which frames all the work, research, thinking and tangents which follow.
Title: Towards an Ontology of Gendered Aesthetics: Surveying Topologies of Self and Other in Performance, Society and Media

Description: A practice-led exploration, analysis and critique of the non-binary body in representation, in private reality and being, and in the public consciousness

Research Questions:
Why do some symbols persist universally in human collective consciousness (e.g. the hermaphrodite being, myths of gender-swapping beings/heroes, shamanistic bi-gendered ambiguity) and are yet ridiculed, challenged and suppressed in society and culture?
What constitutes an “acceptable” depiction of a non-standard body is there such a thing? In what contexts?
Why can ‘niche’ areas like stage performance in an arts context and pornography seem less exclusionary of the Other in gender identity than the general public sphere?

Influenced by trans writer Juliet Jacques’ call for an écriture trans-féminine (after Cixous, see http://julietjacques.com), I hope to explore areas of experience and inner vs outer perception: for example in sexual contexts (e.g online interactions), and in general perceptions – a return to my ‘phiz/phys’ (physiognomy/physicality correspondence/duality) and how the Sartrian ‘look’ of the Other builds (or destroys) the inner sense of selfhood, creating a very real ‘hell’ that is ‘other people’ for those of non-cis gender. My own recent experience in online sex work (documented privately at some length last autumn) may shed some light on the darker (i.e., less illuminated, often ignored/stigmatised) side of non-cis/het being and lived experiences, responses, and interactions. This field of investigation helps to respond to 2 of my initial research questions:

1. What constitutes an “acceptable” depiction of a non-standard body – is there such a thing? In what contexts?
2. Why can ‘niche’ areas like stage performance in an arts context and pornography seem less exclusionary of the Other in gender identity than the general public sphere?

Trans discussions of sexual experiences may be accused of paraphiliac undertones (e.g. autogynephilia1, fetishized cross-dressing, auto-erotic narcissism) but this must not bar the genuine lived experiences of others from being regarded on the same level as cis/het or gay/lesbian expressions of queer sex, attraction, and problems (attitudes, prejudices) encountered therein. A key text here: Julia Serano, Whipping Girl.

As recent MFAAH work has covered much mythologically-inspired practice, I’ll use the myth/collective unconscious aspect as a starting point, through references to hermaphroditism/bisexuality (cf. Juliet Mitchell, Feminism & Psychoanaysis).
Reiterating the flattening of high/low socio-cultural dichotomies (cf. Takeshi Murakami’s ‘Superflat’ theory) and interrogating those same existing structures (cf. Foucault, Stallybrass & White writing after Bakhtin on the grotesque body and carnivalesque – also Linda Neade, The Female Nude) - exploring the rhizomatic forms of such structures and where these structures break down (or don’t), and where fetishized constructions and judgement values are applied in a specific non-cis context (whilst acknowledging limited work already exploring, for example, non-fetishized attraction in males to transwomen – see Evangelista, 2020). As I already have a documentary body of work from these experiences, I’ve (tentatively) begun a series of photographic pieces echoing both the artist-as-sculpture concepts of Bruce McLean (‘Nice Style’ pose band, ‘Pose Works for Plinth’) and the fetishistic sculptures of Allen Jones (‘Women as Furniture’) in which I respond directly to the gaze of viewers, conversations, demands and comments received during my 5 months of online wor in 20202. Hence, the performativity of trans selfhood and how performance constructs the self through the reactions gained from others in a certain symbiosis (expectation→ reaction → fulfilment). Another key text: Laura Mulvey, Visual & Other Pleasures.

Returning to the phiz/phys concept of perceived gender aesthetics, what constitutes gendered (usually arbitrary/essentialist) human features and body parts? Hence, drawings/renderings of ‘difficult’ (ambiguous) comic-book style portraits and subjects as a response to the 2018 Comicsgate debacle, and negativity directed against my own works in this field over the years: thus, a challenge to fixed positions of ‘gendered faces and bodies’, and exploration of the narrow field of cis/het male expectation with regard to the aesthetics of female characters and representation (as well as trans/NB characters3). This may then move into public anonymized surveying.

A starting point for possible research outcome: Penthesilea (film), Mulvey & Woollen, 1974.

1 Admittedly a controversial term, which warrants further analysis as my work hopes to cover not only the trans/NB person as perceived by the Other, but also how such persons perceive themselves, and behave/display themselves as a result of this inner perception (as well seeing Self as Other).
2 From an ethical and data collecting point of view, such statements and attitudes may have limited value – one issue raised against the Stanford ‘gay face’ study was that it utilised image data pulled from adult dating sites. The best use of these messages might be the informing of art practice rather than as ‘hard’ data or research, given the circumstances in which most of them were created – although they do present a spectrum of attitude and perception towards the author in a specific anonymised, social context, from a broad cross-section of male viewers – wherein, the intersection of race, nationality/culture, language, and even income became apparent.
3 Traditionally, female readers are far happier with androgynous figures than males – hence the great popularity of Japanese anime and manga among queer and female fans and creators.
 

The Future of Personal Research, and a Bit More

 Having spent the past few months completing Fragments of a Punk Opera , working on my PhD upgrade 'exam' and with the odd dash of a...