Tag: Tugboat
February 2023
August 2021
GRAND RE-OPENING!!!!!!
fetish
LARRY BULLER and PLACK BLAGUE
August 6th 7:00-10:00 PM
DJ Ol Moanin’
Closing Date: August 28th
Tugboat Gallery Proudly Presents “fetish” WE ARE BACK!!! “FETISH” explodes back onto the Lincoln Art Scene. Are you ready for floral decals, fake fur, leather, gemstones, polaroids and references to Asian funerary altars? Then we have what you want. “FETISH” celebrates the rich diversity within the gay-culture and the manner in which gay men seek to find community and thrive in the face of persistant homophobia.
Tugboat Gallery is back after being closed for 17 months.
Plack Blague aka Raws Schlesinger is a multimedia transgressive fetish and leather artist and musician based out of Lincoln, Nebraska. With a focus on cruising, posturing and self examination, Plack Blague exhibits arousal with sexual attitude and homoerotic confidence. He’s just another man on the street…. Plack Blague will be showing a collection of photographs, screen prints, and polaroids!
Larry Buller::Queer voices are often ignored, marginalized or distorted by the dominate culture. I find agency in creating ceramic work which at once challenges these narratives and probes the viewer to question previously held beliefs about the nature of sexual identity, masculinity and fetish objects. Towards that end, I draw upon the humble medium of clay for my admittedly subversive intentions. Ceramics, with its rich historical language and domestic connotations, offers one endless freedom for creative expression. I find inspiration in “high-brow” ceramics typically found in museum collections as well as “low-brow” tchotchkes encountered at thrift stores. My work is a blending of both and seeks to question what might be considered to be in “good taste.” I create plaster molds of fetish objects which are then slip cast into multiples, glazed and embellished with floral decals, gold luster, fur, and fake gemstones. When complete, they resemble showy domestic tableware. Displaying these objects in public bring them “out of the closet” thereby demystifying their use and celebrating their beauty and implied function.
I also create work that focusses on the manner in which gay men self-identify and classify themselves into categories in online hookup sites and/or adopt a persona. These distinctions often revolve around sexual preferences and one’s penchant for top, bottom or in some cases one’s versatility. These predilections are often communicated digitally through the use of emojis such as the peach (bottom) and the eggplant (top). I appropriate the emoji symbol and create ceramic forms that take inspiration from historic examples found in Asian funerary altars. Elaborate compotes hold these peaches and eggplants and become ostentatious centerpieces. To most casual observers these pieces may first appear purely decorative but gay men will immediately understand the double meaning.
My figurines speak to the manner in which some gay men identify with sub-cultures within the gay community. These men may adopt personas such as leather sirs, daddies, puppies, drag queens or otters to name a few. These “china cabinet ready” figurines are of diminutive domestic scale and meant to celebrate the rich diversity within the gay sub-culture and the manner in which gay men seek to find community.
My ceramic work celebrates sexuality, fetish objects and the vast diversity in the manner gay men choose to express their identify and thrive in the face of persistent homophobia.