Skip to main content

Andrew Norris and Queer Identity

Orville Peck as The Blue Boy, Andrew Norris, 2021

     Andrew Norris' talk was really great, now I really want to go see his show. I love how his art is dealing directly with celebrity culture as well as art history. It is really subversive how he places these queer people into paintings that originally re-inscribed traditional heteronormative viewing/identity. I connected a lot to these paintings because of the celebrities he was using, especially Orville Peck, who is about the only country musician I ever listen too. The style of portraiture Norris is doing is also interesting because of how indebted it is to the old masters. I love the juxtaposition of this very historical, serious style of painting with the uncharacteristic figures he puts in them. These paintings feel like something that traditional academics would hate (I know he mentioned his teachers in school not liking him painting celebrities or comic book characters), which I really like. 

    It was also really interesting to hear him talk about how, as much as he likes these paintings, they have the problem of focusing only on a form of queerness that has been deemed acceptable by the mainstream. His honesty about this was really refreshing, and made the work enjoyable. I feel like oftentimes artists don't admit that parts of their work may have issues, but here Norris is acknowledging it while still showing how important they are to him (and to a lot of us in the audience it seemed like). I really connected to him talking about how a lot of us queer people tend to grab onto celebrities and really incorporate them into our identities and cherish them, and it is really liberating to see someone showing this in these paintings that are rooted in history. 

Comments

  1. Yes! I also like the way he used the color to emphasize the image. I understood a lot about his arts through your blog!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I totally agree on the point about acknowledging issues. It's easy to find a lot of flaws in the artistry of your own work, but it seemed like he had some valid criticism. I never really thought about queer people grabbing onto celebrities but I guess we kinda do. (i think i kinda do that with fictional characters tho lol)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Final, Untitled

Untitled, Ethan Swanson, 2022     I am really happy with how this project turned out, out of what art I have made, this is what I am most proud of. With other projects I feel like I haven't completely gotten what I wanted out of it personally, or people didn't totally react to is how I wanted. But this one was really meaningful all around. It was so wonderful to make something that feels super personal to me, but also exists on its own without being connected to me.      It was so fun to learn how to make plaster casts (thanks again Charlie :) ), as well as figuring out how to use the space. The physicality of  putting it together was also so rewarding, I feel that there was a lot of meaning created by putting it together alone, with my own hands. Using direct animation was also so fun, and I really look forward to doing it again. Although I love film, I often find that it is kind of distanced because of the use of a camer...

Picnic Projections

      I really loved making our installation piece. The freedom we had to do whatever was so liberating. I was so impressed with how we had a bunch of different themes emerge from all the random stuff we brought, and how the piece felt pretty cohesive overall. The piece to me has a feeling of a picnic gone wrong. The front half especially is full of such vibrant colors and flowers, feeling inviting at first glance. Then as you look at it longer and read the writing on the walls, it feels a little more ominous. The back on the other hand takes this aggression further, with the book on the wall yelling at you along with all the 'Not for Sale" signs. It felt very current to make something that also seemed to be commenting on the environment. All the greens in the room and the flowers coming out of the trash definitely added to that, along with the fact that the possible consumerism of our 'store' was aborted by the 'Not For Sale' signs. I think it would be int...

My Flickr Findings

  My Flickr Blume No. 2 "Something is happening here and you don't know what it is, do you, Mister Jones?" (Bob Dylan, 1965)          I just took this quote on a very literal level instead of its total meaning. I like the idea of something that is happening that is under everyones radar, so that's what I tried to do with the abstraction in the photos. I like making people see things in a way that they can't with their naked eye.      I took all these photos on a walk in the evening this past weekend. I focused mostly on making more abstract pictures because that is what I generally like to do in my art. To support that I manipulated them quite a bit in photoshop. I had a lot of fun in messing in the 'Curves' menu, I found that was a really good way to mess with them (especially in black and white). Overall I think that most of my photos are  successful, about 16 of them I'm happy with. There were some I included ...