Dirty looks

Celebrating three years of Dirty Looks NYC art collective

In Toronto, we too often try to silence our performers, visionaries and freaks who take transgressive ideas about the body, art, politics and performance to the next level. I refer specifically to rebellious relics like Donnarama, Reg Hartt, Enza “Supermodel” Anderson and Chris Edwards. Dreaming of these four encountering similar desperados such as Nick Zedd, Anne Heche, Margot Kidder and Jack Smith at a future Occupy event makes me have a hot flash. Thankfully, there are still spaces for those who refuse to be defanged. Places like Buddies in Bad Times, Videofag and Pleasure Dome.

Pleasure Dome has been presenting experimental media art since 1989; it isn’t really a place so much as a state of mind. This time around, the art collective welcomes Dirty Looks NYC — a platform for queer experimental film, video and live art — to Toronto, screening a program of films and videos culled from their defining first three years of existence. Also at the Toronto event, New York performance-art doyenne Narcissister will present a rare and special show.

What is a Narcissister? She is a trompe I’oeil; a soothsaying, virtuostic, hyperbolic, renegade weirdo whose performance style tips over the edge of political camp using mask, dance, storytelling and raw athleticism. As an extension of her screening and performance at the Dirty Looks party, Narcissister will offer her first-ever workshop at Videofag. The event will investigate what it means to use disguise as radical and physical transformation. “My performance refigures narcissism through radical acts of self-love,” she says. “Using a mask and a handful of merkin, I play with the limits of burlesque, masquerade and performance art.”

Dirty Looks NYC: Three Years is Thurs, June 5, 7:30pm, at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, 12 Alexander St.
Narcissister and The Mask: A Workshop is Fri, June 6, noon–2pm, at Videofag, 187 Augusta Ave.
Email pdome@bell.net to reserve.
pdome.org

Read More About:
Culture, TV & Film, News, Theatre, Toronto, Arts

Keep Reading

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 5, Episode 5 power ranking: Grunge girls

To quote Garbage’s “When I Grow Up,” which queen is “trying hard to fit among” the heavy-hitter cast, and whose performance was “a giant juggernaut”?

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 5, Episode 5 recap: Here comes the sunshine

We’re saved by the bell this week as we flash back to the ’90s

A well-known Chinese folk tale gets a queer reimagining in ‘Sister Snake’

Amanda Lee Koe’s novel is a clever mash-up of queer pulp, magical realism, time travel and body horror, with a charged serpentine sisterhood at its centre

‘Drag Race’ in 2024 tested the limits of global crossover appeal

“Drag Race” remains an international phenomenon, but “Global All Stars” disappointing throws a damper on global ambitions