Nov. 17th, 2010

reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
James Bidgood (born March 28, 1933 in Madison, Wisconsin) is an American contemporary artist living and working in New York City. His artistic output has embraced a number of media and disciplines, including music, set and window design, and drag performance. In time his interests led him to photography and film and it is for this work that he is most widely known. Highly recognizable, his photographs are distinguished by an aesthetic of high fantasy and camp. His work which was inspired by an early interest in Florenz Ziegfeld, Folies Bergère, and George Quaintance has, in turn, served as important inspiration for a slew of artists including Pierre et Gilles and David LaChapelle. In the late 1950s Bidgood attended Parsons The New School for Design. Bidgood directed the 1971 film Pink Narcissus, a dialogue-free fantasy centered around a young and often naked man. The film took seven years to make, and Bidgood built all the sets and filmed the entire piece in his tiny apartment. He later removed his name from the film because he felt editors had changed his original vision. Consequently, the film bore the word "Anonymous" for the director's credit, and it was misattributed to other directors such as Andy Warhol for many years. Pink Narcissus was re-released in 2003 by Strand Releasing.

Bigood's oeuvre is characterized by a heavy reliance on invention. His photographs feature elaborate sets built ground up from the materials of the theatre, fashion, design, and fine art. In a profile of the artist published in Aperture, Philip Gefter writes,
“ Necessity was the mother of invention for Bidgood, who created elaborate photographic tableaux in his small midtown Manhattan studio apartment. His first erotic series was an underwater epic called Water Colors, made in the early 1960s, in which he used a dancer from Club 82 named Jay Garvin as his subject. The underwater atmosphere is completely fabricated; the bottom of the ocean was created with silver lame spread across the floor of Bidgood's apartment; he made the arch of a cave out of waxed paper, and fashioned red lame into the shape of lobster. He coated Garvin with mineral oil and pasted glitter and sequins to his skin so the silver fabric under photographic lights would reflect on his body like water. For weeks at a time, Bigood would eat and sleep within the sets he constructed in his apartment.”
Many contemporary themes are found even in the earliest of Bidgood's work. Camp, identity, erotics and desire, marginality, and performance all figure heavily in his portraits of nude men. Bidgood's complex references to the theatre and performance seem to presage Queer articulations of Performance. His techniques, working processes, and masterful use of illusionistic color indicate both a mature understanding of his influences and goals and an important contrast to the art movements of the time the work was first created.



more pics )

In 2005, James Bidgood was honored with a Creative Capital grant which facilitated a return to art photography after a hiatus of nearly forty years. His current projects include work for Christian Louboutin and Out magazine. In 1999 Taschen published a monograph of his work including biographical images and stills from his film. The art book publisher Taschen included an interview with Bidgood in its 2008 publication The Big Penis Book, and will re-publish his monograph in 2009. His most recent work was featured in Out in February 2009.

Bidgood is represented by ClampArt in New York City as well as Larry Collins Fine Art in Provincetown, Massachusetts.

James Bidgood's exhibition credits include group shows at powerHouse, New York City (2007); Exit Art, New York City (2005); Fundacio Foto Colectiania, Barcelona (2003), and Nikolai Fine Art, New York City (2000). He has had solo exhibitions at ClampArt, New York CIty (2007); Larry Collins Fine Art, Provincetown, Massachusetts (2007); Marty Walker Gallery, Dallas, Texas (2006); Galeria Espacio Minimo, Madrid, Spain (2002); Galeria Maraeini, Bologna, Italy (2001). and Paul Morris Gallery, New York City (2001).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Bidgood_(filmmaker)

James Bidgood (Taschen's 25th Anniversary Special Edition) edited by Bruce Benderson
Hardcover: 175 pages
Publisher: Taschen; Taschen's 25th anniversary ed edition (April 1, 2009)
ISBN-10: 3836514524
ISBN-13: 978-3836514521
Amazon: James Bidgood (Taschen's 25th Anniversary Special Edition)

James Bidgood is seen as the father of the pulp and glamour aesthetic, yet his photographic works are still scarcely known. He came to New York in 1951, intent on becoming a musical star, and earned his first wages as a drag performer in Manhattan legendary Club 82. His serious employment as a window dresser, freelance photographer, and costume designer enabled him to collect the material he needed for his own photo shoots, for which he built complex sets, often in his tiny apartment. In his photographs and films, he pays homage to the youthful male body via elaborate staging of his romantically shimmering visions of a homoerotic paradise. This monograph presents a complete overview of James Bidgood influential body of work.

More Photographers at my website: http://www.elisarolle.com/, My Ramblings/Art
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Frank Anthony Polito sent me an email to share the latest video he shot in the film directing class he is attending with Todd Stephens.

The video features his partner Craig Bentley as "Mr. Grant."



May 31, 1985 -- Civics teacher, Mr. Grant, gives freshman Jack a lesson on how to handle the school bully.

Based on the novel banned by Facebook -- BAND FAGS! by Frank Anthony Polito

Band Fags! by Frank Anthony Polito
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Kensington (June 1, 2008)
ISBN-10: 0758222653
ISBN-13: 978-0758222657
Amazon: Band Fags

"Ever since I first heard that Lionel Richie and Diana Ross song, `Endless Love,' all I've wanted is to find The One. Someone to love. Who will love me back."
September, 1982. John Cougar's "Jack and Diane" is on endless radio rotation, and Dallas and Dynasty rule the ratings. Jack Paterno is a straight-A student living in the Detroit suburb of Hazel Park, with his own Atari 5200, a Beta VCR, and everything a seventh-grader could ask for. The only thing he has in common with foul-mouthed Brad Dayton, who lives on the gritty south side near 8 Mile, is that both are in Varsity Band. Or maybe that's not the only thing. Because Jack is discovering that while hanging around with girls in elementary school was perfectly acceptable, having lots of girl friends (as opposed to girlfriends) now is getting him and Brad labeled as Band Fags. And Jack is no fag. Is he?

As Jack and Brad make their way through junior high and then through Hazel Park High School, their friendship grows deeper and more complicated. From stealing furtive glances at Playgirl to discussing which celebrities might be like that, from navigating school cliques to dealing with crushes on girls and guys alike, Jack is trying to figure out who and what he is. He wants to find real, endless love, but he also wants to be popular and "normal." But, as Brad points out, this is real life--not a John Hughes movie. And sooner or later, Jack will have to choose.

Filled with biting wit and pitch-perfect observations, Band Fags is an exhilarating novel about lust and love, about the friendships that define and sometimes confine us, and about coming of age and coming to terms with the end of innocence and the beginning of something terrifying, thrilling, and completely unpredictable.
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Frank Anthony Polito sent me an email to share the latest video he shot in the film directing class he is attending with Todd Stephens.

The video features his partner Craig Bentley as "Mr. Grant."



May 31, 1985 -- Civics teacher, Mr. Grant, gives freshman Jack a lesson on how to handle the school bully.

Based on the novel banned by Facebook -- BAND FAGS! by Frank Anthony Polito

Band Fags! by Frank Anthony Polito
Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Kensington (June 1, 2008)
ISBN-10: 0758222653
ISBN-13: 978-0758222657
Amazon: Band Fags

"Ever since I first heard that Lionel Richie and Diana Ross song, `Endless Love,' all I've wanted is to find The One. Someone to love. Who will love me back."
September, 1982. John Cougar's "Jack and Diane" is on endless radio rotation, and Dallas and Dynasty rule the ratings. Jack Paterno is a straight-A student living in the Detroit suburb of Hazel Park, with his own Atari 5200, a Beta VCR, and everything a seventh-grader could ask for. The only thing he has in common with foul-mouthed Brad Dayton, who lives on the gritty south side near 8 Mile, is that both are in Varsity Band. Or maybe that's not the only thing. Because Jack is discovering that while hanging around with girls in elementary school was perfectly acceptable, having lots of girl friends (as opposed to girlfriends) now is getting him and Brad labeled as Band Fags. And Jack is no fag. Is he?

As Jack and Brad make their way through junior high and then through Hazel Park High School, their friendship grows deeper and more complicated. From stealing furtive glances at Playgirl to discussing which celebrities might be like that, from navigating school cliques to dealing with crushes on girls and guys alike, Jack is trying to figure out who and what he is. He wants to find real, endless love, but he also wants to be popular and "normal." But, as Brad points out, this is real life--not a John Hughes movie. And sooner or later, Jack will have to choose.

Filled with biting wit and pitch-perfect observations, Band Fags is an exhilarating novel about lust and love, about the friendships that define and sometimes confine us, and about coming of age and coming to terms with the end of innocence and the beginning of something terrifying, thrilling, and completely unpredictable.
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Mykola Dementiuk’s fictional world is very much related to his own experience made of movie theatres and almost abandooned apartments in the lower East Side of a ’70 New York, a city that doesn’t exist no more.

More than once his main character has no name and is a young man experiencing his first time far from the safe shelter of the suburban life: in this case the young man was living not far from the lower East Side, in the Queens. When the man’s mother dies leaving him with a nice annuity and the possibility to realize his small dreams, he decides to move to Manhattan. He has a white collar job in the City and leaving in the East Side he is nearer to the Times Square’s theatres he likes to frequent during the weekend. He has not much experience as homosexual, but he is not against the idea to make more, but in his naivite he exchanges lust for love.

At first I thought the love story he was leaving was nice and sweet, but indead knowing Mykola Dementiuk’s stories, it was not a chance. The young man our hero meets in a bookstore reading Catcher in the Rye (and for that reason he will become Catcher), is not the sweet young man he appears. Few days later the main character meets him again, only this time he is dressed as a young woman and it’s clear that she is whoring herself. This is not a reason for the hero to avoid her, on the contrary, he is even more fascinated by the perspective of having a woman and a man in the same body, in a way it allows to him to not think at himself as homosexual, or at least not entirely.

But Catcher has not interest in a love story, she is too much lost in her own quest towards hell, and instead of finding in the hero a reason to love, she brings him down in her world: the hero becomes Missy, not as pretty as Catcher, but with her own admirers. One of these men will give Missy her first real experience with sex, but that is not what she will consider important. Other than allowing her to discover a world she didn’t know existed, Catcher introduces Missy to Sheila, an Afro-american transgender woman (I think from woman to man, but I’m not entirely sure…) who will be Missy’s first experience in giving and receiving pleasure.

I’m not sure if we can consider Missy’s evolution from young man to young woman an happily ever after story, as I’m not sure that this is indead Missy’s final stop; I think she has still a lot to learn and probably Sheila is not her definitive lover. Sure Missy is more man than woman, and so maybe Sheila is a good choice for her right now, but Missy is only 26 years old, and those are the ’70… we well not that in 10 years or so the world will change for people like her, and she will need to change again as well. The world that Missy is wandering now is on a timeline and she cannot build her home inside it. It’s for sure with nostalgia that the author tells the reader about it, even if dirty, shady and dangerous, in a way that world was probably more genuine, and men like Missy had more chance to openly live then that maybe now.

http://www.extasybooks.com/ebjmsite/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=ebook_flypage&product_id=8999&category_id=58&manufacturer_id=156&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=50

Amazon Kindle: Variety, the Spice of Life

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading_list&view=elisa.rolle
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
Mykola Dementiuk’s fictional world is very much related to his own experience made of movie theatres and almost abandooned apartments in the lower East Side of a ’70 New York, a city that doesn’t exist no more.

More than once his main character has no name and is a young man experiencing his first time far from the safe shelter of the suburban life: in this case the young man was living not far from the lower East Side, in the Queens. When the man’s mother dies leaving him with a nice annuity and the possibility to realize his small dreams, he decides to move to Manhattan. He has a white collar job in the City and leaving in the East Side he is nearer to the Times Square’s theatres he likes to frequent during the weekend. He has not much experience as homosexual, but he is not against the idea to make more, but in his naivite he exchanges lust for love.

At first I thought the love story he was leaving was nice and sweet, but indead knowing Mykola Dementiuk’s stories, it was not a chance. The young man our hero meets in a bookstore reading Catcher in the Rye (and for that reason he will become Catcher), is not the sweet young man he appears. Few days later the main character meets him again, only this time he is dressed as a young woman and it’s clear that she is whoring herself. This is not a reason for the hero to avoid her, on the contrary, he is even more fascinated by the perspective of having a woman and a man in the same body, in a way it allows to him to not think at himself as homosexual, or at least not entirely.

But Catcher has not interest in a love story, she is too much lost in her own quest towards hell, and instead of finding in the hero a reason to love, she brings him down in her world: the hero becomes Missy, not as pretty as Catcher, but with her own admirers. One of these men will give Missy her first real experience with sex, but that is not what she will consider important. Other than allowing her to discover a world she didn’t know existed, Catcher introduces Missy to Sheila, an Afro-american transgender woman (I think from woman to man, but I’m not entirely sure…) who will be Missy’s first experience in giving and receiving pleasure.

I’m not sure if we can consider Missy’s evolution from young man to young woman an happily ever after story, as I’m not sure that this is indead Missy’s final stop; I think she has still a lot to learn and probably Sheila is not her definitive lover. Sure Missy is more man than woman, and so maybe Sheila is a good choice for her right now, but Missy is only 26 years old, and those are the ’70… we well not that in 10 years or so the world will change for people like her, and she will need to change again as well. The world that Missy is wandering now is on a timeline and she cannot build her home inside it. It’s for sure with nostalgia that the author tells the reader about it, even if dirty, shady and dangerous, in a way that world was probably more genuine, and men like Missy had more chance to openly live then that maybe now.

http://www.extasybooks.com/ebjmsite/index.php?page=shop.product_details&flypage=ebook_flypage&product_id=8999&category_id=58&manufacturer_id=156&option=com_virtuemart&Itemid=50

Amazon Kindle: Variety, the Spice of Life

Reading List:

http://www.librarything.com/catalog_bottom.php?tag=reading_list&view=elisa.rolle

Profile

reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
reviews_and_ramblings

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 12 3456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Links

Most Popular Tags

Disclaimer

All cover art, photo and graphic design contained in this site are copyrighted by the respective publishers and authors. These pages are for entertainment purposes only and no copyright infringement is intended. Should anyone object to our use of these items please contact by email the blog's owner.
This is an amateur blog, where I discuss my reading, what I like and sometimes my personal life. I do not endorse anyone or charge fees of any kind for the books I review. I do not accept money as a result of this blog.
I'm associated with Amazon/USA Affiliates Programs.
Books reviewed on this site were usually provided at no cost by the publisher or author. However, some books were purchased by the reviewer and not provided for free. For information on how a particular title was obtained, please contact by email the blog's owner.
Days of Love Gallery - Copyright Legenda: http://www.elisarolle.com/gallery/index_legenda.html

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 5th, 2025 03:30 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios