academia

ocad

I’m giving a modified version of my artist talk about the creation of self-media (Self-portraiture: Identity, Transformation and Performance) at the Ontario College of Art and Design (OCAD) in Toronto.

The talk is part of a 2000 level studio course called Making Gender. (March 22nd)

(The following excerpts are from Self-portraiture, Transformation, Identity and Performance, a talk I gave at York University’s Visual Arts Department’s The Body: from Liminal to Virtual, an eight part speaker’s series of Canadian artists. This series was curated by Jon Batin. My talk included a visual presentation of over forty documentary and staged self-portraiture photographs. I gave the talk on February 9th, 2011. I also used some excerpts at an artist’s talk at Brock University on February 15th, 2011. This talk was curated by J. Paul Halferty.)

* * * * *

nina1The aestheticization of the female form and the performance of femininity is in my opinion the grandest narrative in the history of art and culture. Maybe architecture has a vaster lineage.

But the control, abstraction, eroticization and battle that defines, hierarchicalizes and rarifies The Feminine is an aesthetic narrative that includes but is not limited to art objects like paintings, sculpture, film, hieroglyphs, fashion photography, pop music videos, pornography and ubiquitous celebrity culture.

As an aesthete it is my intention to contribute to, to continue, to subvert, to deconstruct and to celebrate this lineage in the most interesting ways I can.

Because my work begins from a visceral impulse I used to think it wasn’t political. I was mistaken to think that politics was something that was abstracted out of the life of a transsexual aesthete who was primarily interested in the body, representation and transformation.

I now understand this work as radically political.

* * * * *

Picture5At each phase of my life I created a new self-portraiture and a new shape-shift, a “new me”, a new social role, a new fantasy I wanted to be, a new fantasy I had become, a new aesthetic calling, to make real, a siren call to follow. They are all me.

Sometimes it felt like the only way to survive certain transformations was to document them, to create an art object.

Other times it was not being able to rest until I had iconized a hieroglyph of who I was in The Now. Not just a representation of my embodiment, but also a kind of energetic signature of what obsessed me, where I wanted to go in life, who I would be to make life “livable.”

A power image.

* * * * *

Picture1I’m also really into reading performance manuals like The Secret, Anthony Robbin’s Ultimate Power and Awaken the Giant Within, How To Think Like Successful People, and The Power of Now. Some of these are spiritual books. Some of them are business leadership manuals. But they are all about performance to me, the performance of conscious thought, the performance of personal metaphors, the performance of thought to create reality, the performance of the elated spirit which can lead us to “success” or “enlightenment” or maybe they’re the same thing.

I do not know.

The books are fascinating to me though.

* * * * *

Picture3I understand that in many people’s opinion I do not have an authentic body.

Some people do not consider me an authentic woman.

Other’s say that my femininity can’t be authentic.

Others do not consider self-portraiture to be authentic work.

Even my theatre training as a performer is teaching me to speak and breathe in a more authentic way.

* * * * *

The role of the muse is greatly underestimated in our misogynistic culture.

The Guerilla Girls famously pointed out that only 5% percent of the artists in New York city’s Metropolitan Museum of Art were women, but 85% of nudes were female. Undoubtedly, this was their call for the museum to (rightfully) include more female artists.

But I also believe that women’s role as muse has not been taken seriously enough.

Salvador Dali’s wife Gala, for instance, inspired dozens of his paintings, and before him she was muse to Andre Breton as well as several other Surrealists. Her body, her presence, her history, her personae –whatever it was, she inspired these men to make art about her. Art objects begin to radiate off her body. But the power of this intangible creativity is not acknowledged in any kind of authorship or ownership over the objects.

mThe same could be said of Marilyn Monroe who inspired many photographic portraits with her body, her emotions, her history, and her social status as a symbol. She did not own them, and these objects went on to radiate into a powerful cultural iconography that has survived and inspired for decades.

This work, the creation of these objects –most often inspired by women, beautiful women, feminine women– however, is not considered a legitimate authentic art practice.

Musing is incorrectly conflated with modelling.

Silicone transsexual Amanda Lepore is another example. Her image and body have inspired famed American photographer David Lachapelle to create many of his signature works. Her body has alsobeen used to create fashion photography. Her face has appeared on a Swatch watch and on designer purses.

Like Marilyn she is contributing to a historical narrative of femininity. She is an international muse at the zenith of her contemporaries in many ways. Also like Marilyn she shares a reputation for being more of “a personality” than an artist.

justify my loveFor me, growing up, Madonna was the woman who leaped the divide between artist and muse. Madonna, one of the most photographed and filmed women in history, by many of the most esteemed image makers of her time. To me, she seemed assured that the reinvention, documentation and objectification of her Self was her own on-going masterpiece.

* * * * *

I work with my voice teacher to find my authentic voice. My voice teacher is mezzo soprano Fides Krucker. I knew her for performing avante gard composer R. Murray Schaffer’s postmodern operas in Canada.

Personally, I do not find that my work with her is giving me a more authentic voice. The training enables me to find a way of speaking where I can relax and release certain structures in my body to let air move through me while I am sounding to instigate a certain contained unpredictability of emotion and resonance. It’s not more authentic. It’s more theatrical. Not theatrical in the sense of being more fake, or more over-the-top. It is more theatrical in that it is more compelling to observe.

The aesthetic imagination of opera has discovered a greater way of breathing. There is more room for breath in my body. This makes more room for voice. More breath inside my body also makes greater incarnations of myself as I continue to move through the phases of my life, each new me has greater inspiration (literally) than if I hadn’t had the training.

Picture6It also creates more tragic versions of myself. Not tragic in the colloquial sense. Not in the “that’s so sad” sense.

Tragic like in opera. Big emotions.

Because I think that everyone’s life is tragic. We all die. Most of us will get sick. We watch people we love grow old and die. Life includes much suffering.

So I think we need to embrace the Tragic. The bigness of life for what it is. To deny it is to let it crush us.

I have found that the performance of more compelling breathing very simply creates greater self-identities.

* * * * *

Self-portraiture is the dominant form of self-expression in our culture. This cultural moment will be in part defined by it. It’s as prevalent as hip hop.

Facebook and Myspace have turned millions of people into self-portrait artists. Not to mention our pervasive interconnected performances of The Self.

facebookOccasionally, while thumbing through people’s profile pictures –which are since the inception of facebook becoming noticaebly more sophisticated technically, formally and in their use of personal semiotics — occasionally, I come across what I consider a masterpiece of self-portraiture.

A generation of youth worldwide is growing up for the first time with self-representation and self-portraiture as part of their coming of age. It’s essential for them to be connected and interconnected to the way our world operates.

* * * * *

(The following is a response to a question during the Q and A session following my talk.)

Q: Do you find the way you have looked has influenced the way you behave? Have your different bodies created new interior “you’s” when you recreated yourself? And, do you take cues from the way you look in order to determine how you should behave?

A: The first thing that comes to my mind is that when I first got my breasts done I became hypersexual. What most people would call promiscuous. I had never had attention from straight men like that before, and when I got my hips done I felt that for the first time my body wasn’t made up of external prosthetics that would be unwieldy when getting undressed during a one night stand. Also, my confidence nina as jessica rabbitincreased from each beautifying procedure, but only for a little while. It was a momentary high. Then when I had my breasts done a second time I felt a lot less sexual because there were complications and I lost sensation in my left breast. Now I understand that the amount of makeup I wear, big hair and exposed cleavage can symbolize that I am sexually available, on “the look-out.” But this is not the case. These cultural signifiers have lost most of their sexual implications to me now, and they represent an aesthetic puzzle I assemble daily. This body, although I am aging, is primarily an image I built years ago. It does not speak to the interior “fantasy woman” I want to be currently. Thus, the ongoing project of maintaining my image is as aesthetic as it is sexual. My extra-daily embodiment and representation inside art objects and art experiences is more interesting and vital to me now than what most people would consider day to day real life.

Brock-University1

The course is in Brock U’s theatre department, and it is called DART 3P95: Praxis I: Queer Theories: Intersecting Identities in Theory and Performance.

I will be visiting the class in the winter sometime. Not sure exactly when yet.

The play is now being studied at York, Guelph and Brock universities.

This course is taught by J. Paul Halferty.
paul2

This is the course description:

“Praxis 1 Queer Theories: Intersecting Identities in Theory and Performance” uses studies in sexuality as a springboard for examining the ways in which our subjectitvies and identities are constituted, how they intersect, and how these intersections have been theorized and enacted in both theory and theatrical brockpractice. Working from the belief that theory and practice re-enforce each other, and, in fact cannot be fully disaggregated, it will have students engage critically with various ideas about subjectivity and identity (sex, gender, race, class, nation) as they are expressed in theoretical writings, in performance, and in performance texts, from a queer theoretical perspective.

i was barbie

Special thanks to Michael Pihach for helping me create the image and to Dan Vernon for the poster design.

FYI-
PSi is a professional association founded in 1997 to promote communication and exchange between scholars and practitioners working in the field of performance. The organisation has staged numerous international conference and festival gatherings that have moved between the discourse and practice of performance. PSi conferences have been held across the U.S.A. and the U.K. and in Germany, New Zealand, Singapore, Denmark, and Croatia.

for more info check out their website http://psi16.com/

This performance is directed by Brendan Healy and dramaturged by Judith Rudakoff.

guelph-logoVery excited that my play The Silicone Diaries is being studied at another Canadian university.  It will be required reading in Sexuality and the Stage, a theatre course taught by reknowned playwright/director Sky Gilbert.  I will also be showing up (Nov 2, 2010) to speak in the class.

(The Silicone Diaries was dramaturged by Judith Rudakoff and directed by Brendan Healy.)

the highly aesthetisized Faire Fecan Theatre

the highly aesthetisized Faire Fecan Theatre

I am going to be speaking at York University’s theatre department’s monthly Prime Time event, a monthly speakers’ series for the students. I will be talking about the process of working on my plays The Silicone Diaries and i was Barbie. I will also be taking part in a live interview about my artistic work by queer theatre academic (and the Chair of the Board of Directors of Buddies in Bad Times Theatre) J. Paul Halferty. The event is taking place on February 10th, 11:30am-1:30pm, in the beautiful Faire Fecan Theatre.

The event is coordinated by Marlis Schweitzer, the Area Coordinator for Theatre Studies at York.

About CIUT
CIUT 89.5 FM is Toronto’s preeminent, listener-supported presenter of leading-edge music and spoken-word programming since 1966. Firmly rooted in the University of Toronto community, CIUT’s programming reaches and represents the community at large and encompasses a wide panorama of styles and expressions. CIUT entertains and informs listeners from Barrie to Buffalo, Kitchener to Cobourg, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

telingtales

I recently had the pleasure of attending Telling Takes Out of School, a project of the Playwriting and New Play Dramaturgy students at York U’s Theatre Department. The evening consisted of original monologues presented or performed by the students. Each monologue was inspired by one of Toronto’s leading theatre professionals. Each student had chosen a different artist to interview earlier this year and created a work based upon that person’s essence. I saw pieces inspired by Daniel Brooks, John Mighton, Sky Gilbert, Evalyn Parry, David Smuckler, Kelly Thornton, and others.

Because I know some of the artists and their work it was fasinating to see how the 3rd and 4th year students experienced them.

One of the students, Dan Vernon, interviewed me back in October and devised a beautiful piece called “The Nun and the Wolf.” I was impressed and honoured by how he interpreted me.  His monologue was very provocative (how fitting!), and there was a palpable shifting in the audience at the climax of his piece.

There were bios of some of the inspiring artists in the program.  Dan included only a single quote from me in the program: “I want to be able to be a human animal.”  Continue reading

nina writing

AN INTERVIEW WITH CANADA’S MOST FAMOUS TRANSSEXUAL

by Evan Vipond: Contributor [to Excalibur]

Nina Arsenault is commonly referred to as Canada’s most famous transsexual. Arsenault has two postgraduate degrees in theatre, one of which was completed at York University alongside her undergraduate degree. After quitting the theatre world to transition from man to woman and undergoing 60 cosemtic procedures, Arsenault has recently re-entered theatre as both playwright and performer. Her most recent play, The Silicone Diaries, will be produced by Buddies in Bad Times Theatre from Nov 14th to 21.

EVAN: Playwriting is about creating a story, while directing is about representing or interpreting someone else’s story. Which do you prefer, the role of the primary creator or the interpreter?

NINA: Primary creator at this point, absolutely. Because the thing is, where I am in my life, my identity and my history, there’s not a lot of stories like mine. It’s not like I can filter my experience through another writer’s words. I don’t really know any other writers [like me.]

E: Your recent theatre work has been autobiographical. do you see this as a continuing trend?

N: Yeah, definately. I just think that truth is stranger and more interesting than fiction. And I think that the way I live my life and who I am is pretty unique, so I might as well just keep going. I trust that my life is interesting, that my stories are interesting, so I will do that.
I think a lot of work I see about trans people is either documentary stuff, which is great, but that only satisfies in a certain way, and then a lot of it is really fake –like campy stories about trans people. So I want to explore aspects of my experience which aren’t necessarily “documentary” and that speaks to different sublime qualities in my life.
The things is, as a trans person, rarely do we ever get to tell our stories in the way we want to tell them. Even when there is someone doing a documentary about us, and there have been so many documentaries about us, it’s rarely us who’s putting it together. So it’s always someone else who’s constructing our narratives. Continue reading