A “Hairy” Performance at Muffins Variety Show!!

It’s been a loooong time since I’ve done any sort of performance art, but I dug into my musty suitcase of handmade costumes and I am excited to perform a movement, Burlesque’y, drag, political, (what other words can I use to describe this so you will come), funny, silly, sexy piece at:

MUFFINS IN THE WINDOW, NYC’s longest-running variety show.

When? Thursday, June 20th at 7:30pm sharp!

Where? Dixon Place located at 161 Chrystie St in NYC

Also featuring: Trae Durica (swoon), Lambie, Ethan Cohen, and Wae Messed.

 

how to pay attention to a body.

all photos by mike geffner

all photos by mike geffner

Here’s the thing: I’m not always so present in my body. We’ve had a tumultuous relationship over the years and although we are on speaking terms right now, there was about a decade where we just ignored each other. Passive-aggressively passed by, barely making eye contact.

Sometimes it felt like a language barrier, not quite having the right words to say, unable to connect. This tends to happen. We had a few interventions, even started collecting dictionaries in order to search for more words to speak out. But it’s been a long, long journey toward understanding the ‘right’ ways to pay attention to each other.

On a Friday in Queens, I walked from the 7 train toward an art gallery where poets, music makers and performers of various disciplines gathered for an event produced by The Inspired Word performance series. I was not going as poet, rather performance artist, lending my skin out to strangers and friends to be referenced as The Human Canvas  (Graffiti’d Body).

Here’s another thing: It’s difficult to present a piece where much of your body is exposed with the intention not to titillate. What I wanted people to contemplate were the various ways in which bodies are like buildings. Buildings which we tag with our name or images or bits of contemplations. How skin can be weathered like bricks. What one would write or draw if given the opportunity (with pen, ink, marker) to tag another’s body.

The humans were shy at first, but so was I. None of these people knew how deeply uncomfortable it was for me to be dressed in such drag. Red sequined tube top worn as skirt. Chest scooped into a black bra, a contraption I haven’t worn for almost two years. Bra has since been replaced by a binder, training my tits to flatten and disappear. All beneath yellow police caution tape.

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The rules were: You may write or paint anything and anywhere. Some wrote their initials. One wrote a sound: ZOINK!. Another wrote part of a poem. There were designs, declarations (will you gay marry me?) and symbols.

People were shy at first; perhaps we are just not used to people saying: hey, want to write on my exposed flesh?

Throughout the night, people timidly approached my skin. Many asked first (which I appreciated, though it was certainly not necessary; the permission was granted the moment I walked through the door). One said, I don’t know how to paint. I responded, yes, you do. And then, I put some paint on the end of a brush and handed it to her. Just……put this color on me and see what happens, I said.

She painted: Let’s make love, not war.

I smiled and said, Hey, you’re a painter now!

273At the end of the night, my partner arrived, and he approached my skin quietly, using paint and marker to tag me.

Being the only one who knows my gender in its entirety, he said, “I’ve never seen you like this.” (This meaning skirt and fluffed-up breasts).

This piece is political, but in a space like this where I speak only if the audience asks questions, its more about being silent and observing the ways in which people approach a body.

I could feel myself being ogled at times, and I knew this was part of human nature. Outside of spaces like this, I practice androgyny. I am far less and more of the in-between.

Here’s how I pay attention to my body now: I enforce encourage dialogues. With myself. With others. I ask questions of myself. How does this feel? How do I want to be today? 

What felt comfortable yesterday won’t always feel that way today.

So, I encourage my body to be more open. To be more out loud. To speak up and out. To perform on and off stages. This reminds me that the silent treatments only prolong stagnation in a body.

My body has housed me for over three decades. The shape has changed and I’ve got quite a few scratches and signatures on it now, but it is also a speaker box. And I intend to project.

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Tonight’s Performance: graffiti’d body

My body is a building and in these thirty-six years of living inside it, I have been tagged and broken into. I have had invited guests and uninvited guests. I have even tagged myself.

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Bodies are like buildings because they have many stories.

Bodies are like buildings because they have visitors.

Bodies are like visitors because they are hard but also cracked in some parts. They have windows; they see things. They can crumble; they can be built back up.

Tonight, I offer up my body as a building to be tagged. To be written on. To be entered with text or paint or labels or just wandering eyes.

InspiredWordNYC presents LAST FRIDAYZ @ Local Project, an event inspired by the epochal underground spirit of the long-gone Gaslight Café, SAMO, and Folk City.

ALL AGES WELCOME.

Doors open @ 7pm for open mic sign-up, show starts @ 7:30pm and ends at midnight.

12 slot open mic for music, poetry, spoken word, and performance art ONLY – a strict 6-minute time limit for anything spoken, 7 minutes for anything musical (please time your pieces and respect the time constraints). Slots are first come, first served. Overflow will be put on a standby list.

Tickets are available for $8 dollars online or $10 at the door.

$7 Early Bird Specials are available up to a week prior to the date. *Limited Availability*

InspiredWordNYC will donate $2 of every ticket sold to Local Project. There’s also a donation option on this page where you can donate whatever you’d like directly to this wonderful organization.

*****
Who: Produced by InspiredWordNYC
http://InspiredWordNYC.com

Where: Local Project
http://www.localproject.org/
11-27 44th Road
Long Island City Queens

the performance of skin

At a recent arts festival in Brooklyn, I came across a young performance artist who I approached after watching for several minutes.

My initial observation was of this: Human with hazelnut-colored skin, wearing white tank top and white pants, stands, moving only her upper body. I recognize her gestures, but cannot place how. She is moving head to the left and then right. Shrugging shoulders. And repeating. 

Finally, I go up to her and read the sign beside her, describing the piece.

Black or White or      by Reya Sehgal

Passersby are invited to beautify the artist’s face using skin color-based beauty products, creating a new kind of multicultural subject. Using Michael Jackson’s “Black or White” music video—an early ‘90s paean to multicultural love—as a framing device, this participatory piece explores themes of race and multiculturalism in the beauty industrial complex.

Beside the artist was a palate of colors squeezed out of skin foundation make-up. Her movements were copied from Jackson’s famous video and afterwards, she sat motionless, body covered by a white sheet, as passersby painted her face.

I told her I felt uncomfortable and I knew that was the intention.

I told her that I wished she had other colors like red or yellow (which have been used to describe skin tone and even race). 

She responded that these are the only colors available for people to use as foundation. These are what are marketed as skin tone shades.

I slowly walked away, allowing more people to enter this space and get involved. I drifted my eyes back toward her throughout the day, watching people cover her skin.

After about an hour, I walked up to her once the crowd dissipated. She was covered in thick gasps of browns and beiges. I grabbed a make-up sponge and dipped it into the bowl of water beside all the colors. Then, I moved toward her face and began wiping the paint away. I wanted to remember what her face looked like before the cover-up. I didn’t think any of those colors made her any more beautiful. I noticed myself feeling anger at all the layers of cover-up on her. With each scrape, I returned sponge back into the water, heading back toward her face to remove more. No matter how much I tried swiping at the oily make-up, it wouldn’t come off. I realized she was succeeding in this performance. I was not only thinking of race: color, blending, what is added/what is taken away, but the anger of what is hidden, what feels like it needs to be hidden.

How beauty is marketed. How we are encouraged to cover up. To blend. To smooth.

I have never used foundation, nor do I currently wear any make-up. My skin is blotchy and freckled and scarred and dry. Those around me would title my skin: white, though I’m not sure what shade that would be called in the land of make-up.

There have been times in my life where I dumped mascara onto my lashes or attempted a layer of color on my eyelids. I never quite made it work. I certainly didn’t feel any more or less beautiful. I felt covered up. I definitely felt in drag.

Within the construct of beauty, a lot of pain exists. Pressure. To hide what we are often told to hide. To brighten what is told is too dark.

I wonder what would happen if we all sat with palates of colors beside us…..how would others paint us and would anyone try to erase away what exists.

Would anyone just leave a face….a body…..alone….

 

 

Tonight: A Performance of Gender Exploration.

Tonight, I attach placards to body and question the ways in which gender can be experimented on the body.

This is an exciting, new series of drag & burlesque performances by the Brooklyn-born NYC-based drag alliance Switch N’ Play and their special guests for the evening, JZ Bich and  Queer-E Sugar  (my performance alter-ego)! 

Come to Brooklyn and be a part of this highly entertaining, thought-provoking night.

Branded Saloon  603 Vanderbilt Ave.  Brooklyn, NY
$5 admission
Doors @ 9:00 PM, show @ 9:30 PM

Tonight: Hyper Gender Performance

HyperGender Burlesque Cabaret
Sat December 7, 2013, 10:00pm
$15 / 10 if on HyperGender mailing list (just email us and ask to get on the list) 

WOW Cafe Theatre @ 59-61 East 4th Street on the Fourth Floor.
between Bowery and 2nd Avenue NYC 

Celebrate the holidays with Hyper Gender Burlesque Cabaret presenting FEAST.

JZ Bich, Mercedes Matilda and Jean va Gin present: Fem Appeal, Marinara Stardust, The Luvely Rae, Essence Revealed, Foxy Squire, IR Marin, Sister Filthy, Crimson Kitty, Aimee Herman with Jherelle Benn, Elijah Scott Wood and Mikey Mouse.

Looking forward to performing a performance piece…an ode….to my favorite protein with the fantastic spoken word poet Jherelle Benn.

this night leaks homelessness from each exit of air.

On the evening before we are handed an extra hour of minutes, I walk toward east fourth street for some poetry. In my teeth, are the dried mandarins that burst in my mouth with each clap of tooth. There is an applause of bites as I eat more until my tongue is too sugared to speak. I walk up the stairs to a bar with more red than in my hair. So many bottles lined up like stained-glass slurs. I order the cheapest beverage with Brooklyn in its name. It tastes like a hangover. One other woman exists in this bar. She is eating from several to-go tins and I sit, accompanied by broken-in red notebook and black pen. As people enter, what arrives as romantic are the dim shadows over faces. Another poet sits beside me and we roll our eyes around each other. In this light, we are both humans. My supper is this room. I want more of some things and push others beneath the ridges of my notebook. Wang Ping walks behind microphone with length of hair like letters from every lover from first grade to this one. So many words in every dark strand clasped together. She says, “Language…like woman…looks best…when free… naked.” And I want to weep toward this image of dialect on skin. Later, I purchase a stale eclair from a cart for an evening performance of drag and disrobe. I think about the ways in which I envelope my gender lately. On this night, I head toward a theatre for women and trans-folk. I make a small space for myself in a corner of small dressing room where nudity replaces handshakes. I bind my breasts in electrical tape and cannot stop fondling the flatness. When I paint my face, I am other. Two humans on this earth call me animal and I like this moniker of blur. These hours of waiting to go onstage are like curious drips of blood falling on my shoulder. I want to wipe all of this away; I want to run toward its origin. Later, I walk home. The glitter covering my face and limbs are my street lights. I follow my glow back to Brooklyn. Home is where hot tea waits for me. And a painter. A musician and bearded poet. I sleep alone, but my bed is full of the ghosts of others.

Tonight. Hyper Gender.

See Poet drenched in glitter.

See Poet perform the linguistics of body to the soundtrack of Etta James and disrobe.

Tonight, I am excited to be a part of the sexy, gender-bending burlesque show. HyperGender Burlesque.

Tonight’s theme:   GLITTER DUNGEON

November 2nd, 2013 @10pm

Where? WOW Cafe Theater
59-61 E. 4th Street, 4th floor
(btw Bowery & 2nd ave)
New York, NY 10003
F to 2nd Avenue, 6 to Astor place

www.hypergender.com

$15/$10 if on HyperGender mailing list (just email at hypergender@gmail.com and ask to get on the list)

In a black box theatre on the Lower East Side, HyperGender’s getting glittery, hot, handsome, and tied.

Featuring:

Foxy Squire, Ana Drogyna, Eva Arachnia, IR Marin, Aimee Herman, Bo Dirt, Mikey Mouse, Elijah Scott Wood, Glitter Butch Princess – and from Washington, DC, the notorious Private Tails

graffiti’d poetics

We tag buildings with our names or a version of letters which resemble who we are. We boast how fearless we can be by climbing vacant subway trains and reaching questionable heights to hollow out poems onto rooftops and skyscrapers’ windows. We breathe the fumes of aerated paint onto bridges and brick walls. We call this art. Because it is.

When I think about the body, it is hard not to describe it as window’d or broken into. It is difficult not to search for the flaps of skin that may be used like deadbolts to lock out the ones who crawl their way in. Body as a building. Body as a construction site. Carved out poemflesh.

On an evening right before autumn arrived, I removed my clothes. Bound breasts beneath caution tape. Covered bottom half in prophylactics to protect and preserve.  I exited a stage and allowed an audience of others to write on me. Alongside another poet, we read out a collaboration of language, as humans wrote their names on us and messages of love and curiosity. One woman inked her mathematics into my back and I wondered all evening what this combination of numbers unlocked. There was a symbol on my thigh and a sliced poem below my collarbone. An affirmation on my lower back and a list of desires on my forearm.

At the end of this evening, the poet and I were covered. After writing on me, she asked me to write on her.

I wrote:

When poetry dissects, silence is lost.

There are so many ways in which to communicate. Many choose the press of fingers against handheld devices. Others ask for the presence of bones and skin to climb their way into present-tense room. Eye contact is becoming extinct. So, I offer up this body as a gesture of paper to write your poems on. Please use invisible welcome mat and wipe your feet and eyes first. Give the trees a break and remember that this skin can be washed and written on and erased and read. There is so much magnificence in the ability to let go of silence and unravel the body like a scroll.

What would you write on another if given the opportunity?

A Performance of Queerness

 

 

I am excited to join a mix of performance artist burlesque superstars on Saturday, June 8th
at Wow Cafe Theatre

The phenomenal Essence Revealed and I will be collaborating on a piece deconstructing the beauty of gender / hair / bodies / and the hybrid of all three within its deep-rooted sexiness.

HyperGender Burlesque Cabaret

Saturday, June 8, 2013
10:00pm
, $15, advance tickets recommended
$10 if on HyperGender mailing list! 

JZ Bich and Mercedes Matilda bring you a line-up of not queerest of them all:

Crimson Kitty, NYC – not your average Drag Queen
back from Milan – Essence Revealed in a duet with Aimee Herman
a producer of Shades of Burlesque, Sweet Lorraine
from Pennsylvania comes Bunny Bedford
from Vermont Jonathan Bitchman and Billy T Holy
HyperGender’s kitten in her departing performance Leta Le Noir
the twisted videographer Anti Social
Ivy leaguer Ivy League
and from San Francisco the red hot Dottie Lux!

Some may call us blasphemous – we say we are what NYC is about – queerness, glitter and worship of all things different!

More info at hypergender.com