Marilyn Minter in dialague with post-pornography


Autoria(s): Peterson, Nina
Data(s)

01/01/2015

Resumo

This paper analyzes post-pornographic practices – an activist and theoretical movement that recognizes pornography as valuable in understanding social, cultural, and political systems that construct and reflect identity – through the work of American artist Marilyn Minter. The analysis contextualizes post-pornography and concludes with an examination of several of Minter’s recent paintings and photographs through a postpornographic lens to assert that these examples of her work explore sexuality and gender by incorporating aesthetic and ideological references to porn and by invoking the postpornographic tenets of collaboration, disruption of public space, and the inversion of heteronormativity. Creating art with Wangechi Mutu, displaying in Times Square high definition videos of lips that slurp green goo, and painting men garbed in lingerie constitute some of Minter’s endeavors, which reenvision pornographic relationships to authorship and agency, public versus private space, and the expression or repression of fantasy.

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.du.edu/art_mrp/316

Publicador

Digital Commons @ DU

Fonte

Master's Research Papers

Palavras-Chave #Minter #Marilyn #-- 1948- #Pornography #Erotic art #History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology
Tipo

text