Let's Talk about
Sex
By CHRISTOPHER
MOYLAN
|
Reagen
Louie: Orientalia- Sex in Asia
Von Lintel Gallery
555 West 25th Street
New York NY 10001
212 242 0599
September 4 to October 4, 2003
Jurgen Teller:
Daddy You're So Cute
Lehmann Maupin
540 West 26th Street
New York NY 10001
212-255-2923
September 13 to October 18, 2003
my people
were fair and had cum in their hair
(but now they're content to spray stars from your boughs)
curated by Bob Nickas
TEAM
527 West 26 Street
New York NY 10001
212 279 9219
18 October through 15 November 2003
|

Juergen Teller
Selbstportrait, Sauna, Bubenreuth, Germany 2002
digital print, 60 x 40 inches, Edition of 5
Courtesy Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York
|
In two exhibitions encountered
at random during recent visits to Chelsea galleries, sex is used as
a vehicle for investigating issues of national and racial identity:
Jurgen Teller's beer, pork and penis studies of German-ness as reflected
in a series of self-portraits is one, and Reagen Louie's brothel and
sex show encounters with Asian-ness the other. Additionally, a group
show at Team Gallery offers a survey of utopian and mystical extensions
of the sexual, dating back thirty-five years or so, with male artists
looking at male subjects (and a few women) giving and receiving pleasure
with a nostalgic abandon. Here, multiple Christ-like figures engage
in anal sex, an attractive young man offers himself through an open
car window, and another young man pleasures himself with a pumpkin,
all in an effort to convey"sexual energy as key to kingdom and
entering into a more fluid state between the mind and the body,"
as Bob Nickas, the curator of the exhibition, is quoted in the press
statement.
In short, what these three
shows had in common was a male evocation of a social erotic, a situating
of the masculine in relation to a collective identity or transcendent
figure (Christ or Shiva, Eastern or Western sexual experience). Images
of identity construction on the outer margins were few-no blood or whips
or extreme piercings; nothing particularly squeamish or 'kinky'. Theory
was absent as well. No sightings of the fearful objet petit a), but
lots of young flesh posed in the landscape of conventional male fantasy:
bordellos, parking lots, hotel rooms, restaurants, and beaches. Irony
was rampant, but so were various forms of earnestness. Sometimes the
two were difficult to distinguish.

Reagan Louie Bath,
Bangkok 2000
C-Print mounted on aluminum, 38 x 48 inches
Von Lintel Gallery, New York
This blurring of the earnest
and the ironic was particularly evident in the work of Reagan Louie.
The implication of his images of sex workers is that-surprise!-- they
are individuals just like you and me. They horse around together, chat
over cigarettes or soda, and work. Although they are often photographed
nude, the fact that they have sex for money is kept out of view, and
the voyeuristic pleasure of exposed flesh is deflected by the lush composition
of the images. The seemingly hygienic attractiveness of the women, the
tonal warmth and elegant structure of the compositions, and not least
the absence of sex make women seem all the more wholesome. Yet isn't
that the core of fantasy in scenarios involving commodified sex? The
woman for hire is lovely and sweet, just like the girl next door, and
conversely the girl next door is, with the right man or in the right
circumstance, sexually voracious or 'slutty.' What is fascinating about
these photographs is that, even whilefantasy operates within them, the
images also appear to be motivated by a desire for kinship or sympathetic
bond with the subject, a bond that would turn wanderings in the sex
industry into an artistic or spiritual quest, a visual bildungsroman
with pasties. A fifth generation Chinese-American, Louie previously
explored questions of identity, journeying to China to take the documentary
images collected in "Toward a Truer Life" (1991). For this
project he undertook a six year odyssey through Taiwan, Thailand, Japan
and the Philippines. So, whereas one might expect images that raise
difficult issues of sexual exploitation, racial exoticism, and decadence
in the global marketplace, one finds unresolved attempts to find human
contact in the most unlikely places.
At Lehman Maupin Gallery
Jurgen Teller turns his lens from the celebrities and fashion models
of his recent work onto himself. The confessional rigor of this work
suggests the paradox that photography with sex as a focus is likely
to achieve greater depth with the absence of the other. In place of
objectified women, Teller conjures his dead father and a macho culture
of German soccer and beer, each a bitterly unresolved attraction and
repulsion. "Father and Son" depicts the artist nude on his
father's grave at midnight; a soccer ball serves as an allusion to his
father's dislike of the sport. Elsewhere, Teller lounges in a sauna,
his face hidden behind a soccer magazine. With his rear presented to
the camera, he exposes himself as 'arsehole' (his term) and as an object
of desire. Beneath the self-loathing of these images, it is not hard
to find a longing for a masculine ideal made problematic by a confluence
of German and personal recrimination.
Almost six decades after
the end of the Second World War, Germany and 'the orient' (a term Louie
employs in the title of his show) still conjure sexual mythologies too
troubling and complicated to confront directly or dismiss completely.
Still, Teller's pasty, drink-addled figure is the "real" element
missing in Louie's photographs; conversely, the giving and attractive
women in Louie's work are the fantasy missing in Teller's images.

Walter Pfeiffer, credits
to follow
After seeing the Louie and Teller shows, one can be thrown by the poetic
dreaminess of the organizing theme at Team: "My people were fair
and had cum in their hair (but now they're content to spray stars from
your boughs)." Perhaps a new sexual revolution might run like an
x-rated production of Midsummer Night's Dream or a recitation of early
Yeats by the cast of a gay porn film, but probably not. The reactions,
or lack thereof, of visitors to the gallery indicated that the premise
of the show ("Lately, a lot of work by younger artists has brought
back ideas revolving around hedonism, liberation and revolution")
provokes the same sort of wary if bemused interest as a pair of outlandish
sneakers at Jeffrey. This is because hedonism is already a given of
contemporary consumer culture. Self-control is the new lost paradise-lose
weight, organize, manage time, manage money, eliminate the menstrual
cycle. This is not to suggest that all of the works at Team are glimpses
of simple pleasure. Jules de Balincourt's satirical image of corporate
sexual processing (people burn their clothes upon leaving the plant)
gave a refreshingly whimsical take on capitalism and sex, and Tim Lokiec's
cartoon grotesque of oral sex was intriguingly fierce and unresolved.
Wolfgang Tillmans's "Do Not Disturb"-an image of a man opening
a door just enough to present his genitals- was amusing and disturbing
all at once. It would be interesting to see what else lies behind the
door-a geisha, a harem, a rucksack for a back to nature stroll, a pile
of crumpled beer cans
We'll see.