Scene magazine - September 2021

Page 28

28 Scene even though it’s set in New York. There’s also the photo of ISTVÁN by Brighton Pier: in one shot he’s dressed as a man and in one shot he’s dressed as a woman. “Foucault references piers in his work as well; it’s kind of like the funfair. Something unreal – it’s a fantasy – but it is real because you buy a ticket and go there. “We also have Menelas, a porn director who curates a porn festival in Greece. We created a fake advertisement film for Athens, so imagine a tourism advert for gay travellers. Instead of showing some photos of gay Pride or a gay couple drinking a coffee, he shows the underground gay scene. You see explicit sex scenes on the beach. Not the kind of culture the authorities would depict in their tourism videos!” As the Ledward Centre is not yet open, the exhibition is online. The doors will be opening soon, however. There have been some delays due to the pandemic. “The exhibition will be the last one – hopefully! – just in the window and online. If it can open we might do a one-off screening of the films we have – about eight short films, all very diverse. When we start to exhibit inside it will be in October for Photo Fringe. It will be an immersive environment downstairs. You’ll have a pop-up cafe. It will be in the dark and you’ll have projections.”

QUEER HETEROTOPIAS

Socially Engaged Arts Salon introduces a new exhibition at the Ledward Centre ) The work of Gil Mualem-Doron, a Brighton-

based artist, academic and founder of SEAS (Socially Engaged Arts Salon), is socially and politically engaged, exploring urban history, social justice, identity, transcultural aesthetics, migrations and displacement.

“SEAS began in my living room five years ago. At the last exhibition there were 70 to 80 people. You had people outside on the street. Inside nobody could move. We had four dogs running around, we had two film crews and a choir singing in the living room. The people outside were heckled by my neighbour who was a 90-year-old UKIP supporter. She said it’s not the Middle East and they can’t stand like that in the street. “It all got a bit much. We moved to the Black & Minority Ethnic (BME) community in Brighton. Our space was in the basement.” Gil needed a space where the artwork could be presented with more visibility – basements bring obvious limitations. He found an empty space by the library and made some inquiries. It turned out to be none other than the about-to-be-born Ledward Centre, the new LGBTQ+ community space in the heart of Brighton. The latest SEAS exhibition, Queer Heterotopias, runs until the end of September, hopefully with some live events if the Ledward Centre opens

over the next couple of months. “Heterotopia is a Michel Foucault concept. ‘Hetero’ means other, ‘Topia’ means space. It’s about other places, not utopias or dystopias. A heterotopia could be bad or good but it’s different. For example, prisons are heterotopias – a kind of parallel space. Colonies are heterotopias. “He talks about the ships of fools from the Middle Ages – mentally ill people were put on ships and sent to sea. In terms of LGBTQ+ spaces we can look at nightclubs, saunas and cruising areas. Places where sexuality is acted in a different way than it would be in hertronormative spaces. “One of the artists is Annis Harrison. She does embroidery so it’s very feminine, very domestic, but she’s depiticing sex scenes on the London Undeground – which I found funny. We also look at the work of Leonard Fink, he’s a very famous photographer. He was part of my PhD research into cruising in public spaces. He took a lot of photos of the gay scene in New York in the ‘70s and ‘80s. The ones we were interested in are the ones from the piers: the cruising areas. We were granted access to the photos by the LGBTQ+ Centre in New York. It’s kind of what I’m hoping the Ledward Centre will become. “We have piers in Brighton too, so there’s a link

When the centre opens there will be a short period of pop-ups. SEAS Exhibition will be the first thing you’ll see at the Ledward Centre. It will eventually have a cafe upstairs. There’ll be more renovation, including a new gallery space. Gaydio will be moving in. There will be a small cinema too and a community meeting room. Finally, how would Gil sum up Brighton’s art scene? “I think it’s getting better. I opened SEAS in very difficult conditions. When we opened it was almost a desperate act. I’m a socially engaged artist. I just didn’t see many places to exhibit this kind of art. There is a lot of art here but a lot of it is catered to the commercial scene. As there is wealth in Brighton people can afford it. You have a lot of tourists so a lot of art is catered towards that. “I opened SEAS to show socially and politically engaged art. We’ve had hundreds of artists at SEAS now. We also exhibit the work of underrepresented artists. There are still boundaries about what you can exhibit. We’ve had complaints about some of the work we’ve shown, such as the work of a Syrian refugee artist. He depicted the Vitruvian Man from behind with Boris Johnson’s face on his ass. Arabic text on top of the poster translated to ‘ass face’. It was a reference to Johnson calling gay people ‘batty boys’ in an article.” Some people complained about that one, but if Boris can insult people in his articles and become Prime Minister, then artists should be able to express themselves accordingly. D To view Queer Heterotopias, visit: www.seasbrighton.org/queer-heterotopias


Articles inside

Gala Launch of Pride at the Ironworks proves huge success

1min
page 4

Out To Swim South celebrates Pride in the pool

1min
page 5

Chris Sarson raising £2,000 for Ledward Centre and Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents

1min
page 5

The Brighton & Hove AIDS Memorial gets spruced up!

1min
page 6

Allsorts’ #StillProud fundraising campaign raises £400

1min
page 6

Brighton Gay Men's Chorus return to performing at i360's fifth Birthday

1min
page 6

MindOut Trans 101 training

1min
page 6

Majorities in 10 countries 'support legal protection for trans rights'

1min
page 6

Terrence Higgins Trust

2min
page 7

Super Sunday cabaret marathon raises £600 for Sussex Beacon

1min
page 7

Reclaim Pride marches through Brighton city centre

1min
page 7

Queer Bloomsbury: Juno Dawson's 'Lovely Trans Literary Salon'

1min
page 8

Queer in Brighton to host Queer Walking Tour of Brighton

1min
page 8

Win Tickets to Bleach

1min
page 8

Trans Swimming Sessions at St. Luke's Swimming Pool in Hanover

1min
page 8

Bi Pride to take place this month!

1min
page 9

The Clare Project drop-in update and Celebration for Julia

1min
page 9

A QUEER SEX REVOLUTIONARY

4min
page 10

No sex please, we’re Westernised... (but we will shoot you in the foot)

5min
page 11

A JOURNEY THROUGH CHEMSEX

4min
page 14

STUDY: EXPERIENCES OF CHEMSEX

2min
page 15

Stay Sexy

4min
pages 20-21

TITANIA MCGRATH

4min
page 24

SWAPPING NOTES WITH... SAMUEL COUSINS

4min
page 25

FAN THE FLAME

6min
pages 26-27

THE ULTIMATE GAY ICON

2min
page 29

SPOTLIGHT...

4min
page 30

Homely Homily

2min
page 32

Arts Corner

1min
page 32

Stuff & Things

2min
page 34

A QUEER SEX REVOLUTIONARY

4min
page 10

Wall's Words

2min
page 34

CRAIG’S THOUGHTS

4min
page 35

More to me than HIV

2min
pages 36-37

HYDES’ HOPES

2min
page 38

Rae's Reflections

4min
page 39

Book Review

4min
page 40

At Home

3min
page 41

Classical Notes

5min
page 42

All That Jazz

2min
page 43

Art Matters

2min
page 43

Birmingham Hippodrome shares commitment to diversity, inclusion and anti-racism

1min
page 47

Southside Safe Space Returns

1min
page 47

West Midlands Music Board launches to help industry recover after pandemic

2min
page 47

An LGBTQ+ Icon

4min
page 48

VAL MCDERMID

5min
pages 31-48

QUEER HETEROTOPIAS

4min
pages 28-30

What's Cookin?

4min
pages 23-27

Burlesque Express

8min
pages 18-22

SENSORY WORLD

2min
pages 16-17
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