Are you an art nerd? Do you hate the artistic canon because of the ever-pervasive male gaze? Whether the answer is yes or no, it doesn’t matter, because Threesome, a new art exhibit exploring sexuality at New Art Projects in London, says “fuck you” to male lesbian-fantasties, exploring queer sexuality from a woman-centric point of view.
The show features paintings from three queer artists, Roxana Halls, Sadie Lee, and Sarah Jane Moon. Each artist presents 4 paintings: two portraits of each other, one self-portrait, and a portrait of the London-based cabaret performer Ursula Martinez. In their own words, these artists “make bold, alluring, witty and deft works, and explore how they look at each other and themselves.” They definitely deftly use the female gaze—women looking, sometimes lustily, at other women—to push back against the tropey, straight-male fantasy that reduces lesbian women to objects who engage in same-sex activities for a dude’s enjoyment. (Dear terrible straight dudes everywhere, sorry I’m not sorry, but you need to erase this idea from your miopic conciousness immediately).
Besides the candid exploration of queer identity, the paintings are also masterfully crafted, with a bend towards realism that draws the viewer in. Their subjects’ eroticism is self-assured; their bodies do not exist not for the viewers pleasure, but in their own right, and for their own sake. The varied pallets, ranging from radioactive neon’s, to soft shadows, to swirling pastels, makes for a doubly varied and arresting show. The exhibit is up until March 4th, and for those who are in London, the gallery is pairing it with some fantastic opportunities, events, and talks, including “From The Brush To The Pen,” happening on Feb. 22, where the women of Threesome switch up their mediums and turn towards the page. For those of us that can’t jet off to London, you can still find out more about the show here.
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