The Video the Smithsonian Censored

“A Fire in My Belly,” the video project made in 1987 by David Wojnarowicz which got famously removed by the Smithsonian from their “Hide/Seek” queer desire retrospective at the National Portrait Gallery in 2010 is posted in full above.

Inspired by surrealist filmmaker Luis Buñuel, “A Fire” is a silent, stream-of-conscious compilation of bizarre imagery (a rotating eyeball), newspaper clippings (crime headlines in Mexico), black & white vintage video of wrestlers and cockfights.

But it’s the last 4 minutes, starting at the 13:20-minute mark, that got the Catholic League up in arms, demanding that the Smithsonian remove it entirely from the exhibit. The League and some members of Congress claimed that the 11-second depiction of ants crawling on a crucifix (gasp!) was “designed to insult and inflict injury and assault the sensibilities of Christians.”

You bet damn right it was! Wojnarowicz was an angry man up until his death in 1992, angry for feeling invisible, angry for contracting AIDS.

‎”I want to throw up because we’re supposed to quietly and politely make house in this killing machine called America and pay taxes to support our own slow murder and I’m amazed we’re not running amok in the streets, and that we can still be capable of gestures of loving after lifetimes of all this,” he said.

But his anger, his offensive intention is still no reason for censorship. Blake Gopnik wrote in the Washington Post:

If every piece of art that offended some person or some group was removed from a museum, our museums might start looking empty – or would contain nothing more than pabulum. Goya’s great nudes? Gone. The Inquisition called them porn.

Norman Rockwell would get the boot, too, if I believed in pulling everything that I’m offended by: I can’t stand the view of America that he presents, which I feel insults a huge number of us non-mainstream folks. But I didn’t call for the Smithsonian American Art Museum to pull the Rockwell show… His admirers got to have their say, and his detractors, including me, got to rant about how much they hated his art. Censorship would have prevented that discussion, and that’s why we don’t allow it.

Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.) has said that taxpayer-funded museums should uphold “common standards of decency.” But such “standards” don’t exist, and shouldn’t, in a pluralist society. My decency is your disgust, and one point of museums, and of contemporary art in general, is to test where lines get drawn and how we might want to rethink them. A great museum is a laboratory where ideas get tested, not a mausoleum full of dead thoughts and bromides.

Tyler Green wrote in ArtInfo about the larger issues this censorship presents to the American LGBT experience:

A key part of these events is the refusal of religious conservatives to acknowledge that gays and lesbians are Americans in full, as worthy of being studied and contextualized by historians as Catholics or Montanans. The religious right wants nothing less than for gays and lesbians to be made as invisible as possible, to be hidden or removed from our shared national history.

Ironically, almost 20 years after his death, Wojnarowicz is still reliving his nightmare — his mouth being sewed shut with thread.

“A Fire in My Belly” also includes several seconds of masturbatory foreplay, which no one really mentioned during the controversy. Shot under strobe lights, it took me like 20 minutes to get some good screen caps. You’re welcome.

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Art Makes a Splash at The Phoenix Hotel

San Francisco had three fantastic art fairs happening last weekend: SF Fine Arts Fair at Fort Mason, artMRKT at the Concourse Exhibition Center and ArtPad at the Phoenix Hotel. For ArtPad the Phoenix rearranged the hotel rooms overlooking the pool patio and created makeshift galleries to display local art work. I love the vibe of the Phoenix so I dragged Denys to come check out the space for a Black Rock Arts Foundation benefit party on Friday night.

The Phoenix is known as San Francisco’s “rock and roll hotel so I thought it was very fitting to have Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art here featuring black and white photographs of Debbie Harry and David Bowie taken by Richard Peterson.

Simulated sex is the new diamond skull. Borrowing from Andrea Fraser’s intercourse of intimacy and performance, student artist Eliane Lima directed actors into having hot sex performed on-site room at the Phoenix Hotel, then screened it for guests to see. The kinky video is part pornography and part performance/visual art.

In the same room, James Mitchell Perley created an installation to explore spaces that are “haunted by many bodies that successively inhabited them over time…” The shower scene was inspired by the diaries of the late director George Kuchar.


Jhina Alvarado at the 111 Minna room.

Parked outside the Phoenix we found Artis Mobilus (or Art Is Mobile Us?) a brightly decorated bus that doubles as a tiny, funky art gallery. The current exhibition features the punk rock graffiti paintings of Sean Murdock.

ArtPad went on the entire weekend with multimedia performances, panels and ending with live music poolside courtesy of Noise Pop.

BOY TOYS TALK BACK: What do you think of sex as performance art? Can pornography be art?