«--Previous Post | Blog Index | Next Post--»
The Sex Workers' Art Show: Making Sex Arty
The other night, I sat on the cold floor of the San Francisco arts organization CellSpace listening to a woman with red, neon hair announce the first act of the evening to a packed house. She introduced herself as Annie Oakley, curator of The Sex Workers’ Art Show, an event that originated in Olympia, Washington, in 1998. The cabaret-style show, comprised of everything from spoken word to burlesque and multi-media performance art, is made by people who work in many areas of the sex industry. It tours the country every year busting stereotypes about sex work and sex workers (and by extension, about what constitutes art) town-by-town and college-by-college. The show’s aim is “to dispel the myth that [sex workers] are anything short of artists, innovators, and geniuses!”
The artists and innovators who I witnessed perform at the San Francisco show didn’t try to make art sexy, but rather they made sex arty. Some of the performances, namely the burlesque acts, were presented with a quantity of glamour, while others exposed the realities of sex work in a more sobering manner. An eloquently rendered story entitled “Melho’s Place,” by writer and performance artist Amber Dawn started the evening off by shedding light on the humanity of sex work. Burlesque performer Miss Dirty Martini wowed the audience with her stylized fan dance. The art in the show really came to light when the fleet-footed performer hailing from Japan who calls herself Cono Snatch Zubobinskaya danced her way onto the stage with a humorous drag king number. San Francisco author Kirk Read delivered a raunchy yet tender spoken word piece about the closing night of the Circle J sex club in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood. He presented this little piece of history to the audience like a gift, revealing aspects of a community those who are not gay men in San Francisco will never have occasion to be a part of.
If the goal of the show is to illuminate the intricacies of sex work while revealing sex workers as artists, the group of individuals touring with this year’s show certainly have accomplished a few things. The performances are varied and nuanced, portraying sex work in a way that transcends either positive or negative representation. At times the show was steamy and funny, and at others it was serious or sad. Like most things in life, sex work contains a complicated set of experiences that this set of performers articulated through story, movement, and song.
-- Rose Miller
Comments
ARCHIVE
RECENT COMMENTS
Hancock: Racist, a Metaphor for Racism, or Just Dumb? (4)
Jacqueline Johnson wrote:
Fiction or comedy, there is an old familiar overtone that ...
[more]
Film Review: Punk's Not Dead (1)
Road Cat wrote:
NOW AVAILABLE WORLDWIDE!
The NEW UPDATED EDITION of "On ...
[more]
Video: Fox News Altered Photos (9)
jon91101 wrote:
Fox News is a business in a free market. If you've got a p...
[more]
Barack Obama for Graphic Designer In Chief (12)
tom cooper wrote:
Vero Possumus doesn’t mean what Obama says it means. To re...
[more]
Buju Banton Signs Gay Rights Group's Pledge (16)
Jeremy Poliner wrote:
And Just why is homosexuality immoral? I don't get it. why...
[more]
New (Leaked) Music: Beck - Modern Guilt (1)
Jason Walker wrote:
WOW !! 30 MIN album sounds like the producers/radio execs...
[more]
The Dust Off (sort of): Zach de la Rocha (1)
J wrote:
Rage fans like me have been waiting for the day when Zach ...
[more]
The Halfway Mark: The Best Albums of 2008 So Far (9)
hip-hop bob wrote:
El-P - We'reAllGoingToBurnInHellMegaMixx2
Atmosphere - Whe...
[more]
Confidential to Amy Winehouse (2)
Guy Incognito wrote:
Who the hell cares....
[more]
CD Review: Lil Wayne - Tha Carter III (13)
r adams wrote:
Would Weezy add anything to a Jay Z album? Exactly....
[more]
Movable Type 3.33

