kusama pyjamas

Submit   gender + art If blogs were mullets, this would be the party at the back where I aggregate anything to do with gender in arts, pop culture and my favorite, queer feminist art. Less a blog than a visual scrapbook/experiment in linking creators and audiences. For the business at the front of sharing art that might interest queer, feminist, womanist, sex radical, genderqueer, transgender, whoever creatives: please click on the pink above.

Titled for Yayoi Kusama, who is the cat's pyjamas.


so-treu:

dominickbrady:

I want to see this.  Damn you.
kameelahwrites:

Just bought a ticket :)
Black Venus : Welcome to the 48th New York Film Festival
In his unforgettable telling of the short, deplorable existence of  the “Hottentot Venus”—née Saartjie Baartman, a slave from Cape Town who  was exhibited as a freak-show attraction in early 19th-century  Europe—Abdellatif Kechiche (The Secret of the Grain) delivers a  riveting examination of racism.
Gawked at and groped in grimy carnivals in London and, later,  high-society Parisian salons, Baartman soon becomes the object of  prurient fascination of French scientists, obsessed with calibrating  every part of her anatomy—particularly her enlarged buttocks and  genitals. Though Baartman’s life was unspeakably grim, Yahima Torres’s  remarkably complex portrayal of the title character reveals not just a  mute symbol of victimhood but also a woman capable of fierce defiance.  North American Premiere.
Abdellatif Kechiche, 2010, France, 159m


i hadn’t heard of it, but now it’s on my “hopefully i’ll have the opportunity to see it someday because i really want to” list.

so-treu:

dominickbrady:

I want to see this.  Damn you.

kameelahwrites:

Just bought a ticket :)

Black Venus : Welcome to the 48th New York Film Festival

In his unforgettable telling of the short, deplorable existence of the “Hottentot Venus”—née Saartjie Baartman, a slave from Cape Town who was exhibited as a freak-show attraction in early 19th-century Europe—Abdellatif Kechiche (The Secret of the Grain) delivers a riveting examination of racism.

Gawked at and groped in grimy carnivals in London and, later, high-society Parisian salons, Baartman soon becomes the object of prurient fascination of French scientists, obsessed with calibrating every part of her anatomy—particularly her enlarged buttocks and genitals. Though Baartman’s life was unspeakably grim, Yahima Torres’s remarkably complex portrayal of the title character reveals not just a mute symbol of victimhood but also a woman capable of fierce defiance. North American Premiere.

Abdellatif Kechiche, 2010, France, 159m

i hadn’t heard of it, but now it’s on my “hopefully i’ll have the opportunity to see it someday because i really want to” list.

— 2 years ago with 59 notes
#film  #Black Venus  #women  #imperialism  #race 
  1. artofkawaii reblogged this from kameelahwrites
  2. abstractionisms reblogged this from tobia
  3. ladyfresh reblogged this from tobia
  4. lepoinconneurdeslilas reblogged this from tobia
  5. tobia reblogged this from aphoticoccurrences and added:
    Black Venus : Welcome to the 48th New York Film Festival “In his unforgettable telling of the short, deplorable...
  6. k-lit reblogged this from fuckyeahbrownpeople and added:
    We briefly discussed this woman in my SOC 225 class. I definitely want to see this!
  7. muslimrave reblogged this from fuckyeahbrownpeople and added:
    so ready/scared for this!
  8. weian-fu reblogged this from so-treu and added:
    ”Things I will buy the FUCK out of” for $1200, Alex.
  9. curate reblogged this from kusamapyjamas and added:
    “Black Venus” Abdellatif Kechiche, 2010, France, 159m In his unforgettable telling
  10. kusamapyjamas reblogged this from so-treu
  11. kameelahwrites posted this