RICHARD When I started doing the kind of work I’m doing now, there was no queer studies, there was just gay and lesbian studies. So Douglas says this thing that I think is really important. In terms of the shift from art history to visual culture, he writes,
The subject of the discourse, like its object, cannot be exempt from the questions of historicity and relationality (of self and other) that are raised by the theory of subjectivity itself. This does not—in fact cannot—entail assuming a coherent subject position in advance. Rather it means recognizing the continency, the instability of one’s own position, the necessarily situated place from which one speaks, the fragmentation and partiality of one’s vision. And more, it means recognizing how one’s position is constituted, through what exclusions it is secured. (Crimp 1999, 58)
I think it’s really important that there was this shift from this idea that, as art historians, we are somehow going to get at the truth of the object, or that the historical context is going to be reconstructed as fully as possible without our actually thinking—not only about our subject position autobiographically, but about the one we inhabit because of our historical moment and identities. That you should be thoughtful about how you are constructing a past for the uses of the present. And that it’s not just about an archaeology that reveals or digs into the past until it finds the object; in a certain sense, it is also digging into the subject.
The queer studies that I’ve always been most interested in is the kind that looks at reception as much as it looks at production, at the ways in which we queer something often by how we read it and not because of how it was intended. Queerness can be about misbehaving as a viewer or as a reader. When I was in my twenties, I was an intern at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and we had to do a “masterpieces tour”; and there was this one portrait of a soldier by a baroque artist, Antonio del Pollaiuolo. I thought it was really beautiful and I deemed it a “masterpiece” for the purposes of my tour. The guy I was dating at the time said he wanted to hear me give the tour, a proposal to which I reluctantly agreed. After it was over and the small audience had dispersed, the first thing he said to me was: “The basket on that soldier is amazing! You should talk about that.” It had never occurred to me that you could check out paintings the way you might check out men, or at least that you could say it out loud. It was a very explicitly sexual way of reading against the grain. Douglas’s work does not instruct us to look at soldiers’ crotches in paintings, but rather to acknowledge our desiring positions as spectators, especially when those desires do not align with the normative expectations of the museum.
In the introduction to On the Museum’s Ruins, Douglas mentions that he was, at that moment, turning from poststructuralism and institutional critique to activism around the AIDS crisis, moving from the object—critiquing how the museum works, or how modernism flattens art history—to the (queer) subject (Crimp 1993). I came to awareness about art history when poststructuralism was extremely prominent through October, and psychoanalysis to a certain degree; and then there was feminism, which I was very drawn to, and the beginnings of sexuality studies. Although I couldn’t have understood it at the time, what I was looking for was a way to put the subject and the object in conversation.
JON I think it’s important to say explicitly that AIDS was the catalyst for Douglas’s shift in thinking, so how was your shift in thinking related (or not) to AIDS?
RICHARD I worked my first year in graduate school as an intern on Group Material’s exhibition AIDS Timeline (1989) at the University Art Museum at Berkeley. So that was Félix González‐Torres, Julie Ault, Doug Ashford, and Karen Ramspacher. What was really amazing about that project is that they were totally interested in my input. I remember I said, “we have to have Rock Hudson”—there was the cover of Newsweek or something when he came out with AIDS and we put that in the timeline. They went to visit all the local artists who either were dealing with AIDS or had AIDS, and there was an interesting artist named Rudy Lemcke, who did the paintings of Glinda the Good Witch and the Wicked Witch of the West (Figure 5.2). There were these masks from a therapy group; and I thought, “you’re really going to put those masks in?” And they did. What I learned was that art doesn’t have to be about the individual object; it was about this congregation of things, and it could be informational and aesthetic and communitarian. It could use the museum against the ways in which the museum is typically used. What was really interesting is that, just at that moment, Félix—his work as an individual—was really beginning to take off. And I remember when I saw his billboards of that empty bed a few years later, I was just blown away by them.
Figure 5.2 Rudy Lemcke, Glinda, 1988, acrylic on canvas, 36 × 30 in.
Courtesy of the artist.
JON For me, the cultural production around AIDS really coalesced all my interests and affiliations in my late teens in Montreal, which coincided with the late 1990s: political activism, being really interested in film and art, and trying to date guys. Everything felt very disparate and compartmentalized, and then discovering Gregg Bordowitz’s work or John Greyson’s work made me understand that all these things could have a very generative relationship to one another. I worked with Thomas Waugh at Concordia University, and the academic, the activist and the aesthetic were closely tied together; the academic, the social, and the libidinal were all very much linked, and there wasn’t really a sense that anything could be an inappropriate topic to explore [in this vision of film studies and queer studies]. Doing a PhD in the field of art history now, I understand that there’s a historical discipline that for a very long time decided what you could do and what you couldn’t, and that it’s still very much being contested, and I was happily oblivious to all that through most of my promiscuous intellectual formation.
RICHARD Did you know that Waugh had a tremendous struggle with Columbia University Press over the sexually explicit images in Hard to Imagine: Gay Male Eroticism in Photography and Film from Their Beginnings to Stonewall (Waugh 1996)? In the end, the press allowed Waugh to publish the images, with one important exception. There could be no image of any kind on the cover, which was light gray save for a narrow black band with the words “Hard to Imagine” printed in red. I have always thought of this design as the equivalent of sealing the book in a plain wrapper. It is as though the book is pornography rather than a scholarly study of it.
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RICHARD I wanted to get back to that quotation from Zoe Leonard that was in Holland Cotter’s piece in Art in America for the twenty‐fifth anniversary of Stonewall in 1994 (Cotter 1994, 62)—a quotation that I then re‐quoted:
I think what sometimes happens is that we feel things inside—mysterious, curious, angry things that we can’t name. And if we see someone else naming those things, it gives us courage. Like when I first read Sartre of Jean Genet or Audre Lorde or Adrienne Rich. When I saw An Angel at My Table or Tongues Untied, I thought: Yes, I can think this.
Yes, I can take this one step further and live my life the way I want to. Demand respect. Treat others with kindness. You can create inspiration. And inspiration creates change.
Now that’s a very optimistic, amazing passage, but the part for me that’s really important is where she talks about “things that we can’t name”—and the importance of finding the work of writers and filmmakers who speak of those things. Leonard then describes the permission that such works offer: Yes, I can think