KC nOna, Mechelen, Belgium
November 2001
Dirk Verstockt, artistic director of Kc
nOna invited me to be guest curator of a new arts festival
Porn Ar(t)ound the World, a twelve-day
event that would draw from our mutual interest in pornography as
a commentary on global politics and digital aesthetics. As we wrote
in our first press release:"KC nOna will be hosting national
and international artists for whom sexuality and eroticism are the
main sources of inspiration of their work. In Belgium, eroticism
and porno are only taken into account when they are artistically
problematic. The mere pleasurable aspect seems to be of minor importance
to the artistic intelligentsia, who are convinced to be sexually
emancipated and thereby not in need of any sexual-artistic expression
forms"
The preparations were symbiotic and high-spirited, the festival
itself came together beautifully, yet soon exploded with 'virgin'
energy, a lack of recognition within the community, robust foreplay
from the extreme right and city officials, highly ambitious production
schedules, expensive computer technologies, an almost sick curiosity
from the mass media.
The festival opened with Shu Lea Cheang's sci-fi porn movie
I.K.U.,
a screening that was followed the next day by Annie Sprinkle's
performance piece Annie
Sprinkle's Herstory of Porn Sprinkle
also held a workshop for women exploring energy orgasm in Super
Sex Technologies.
Several days later the festival hosted Belgium's premier screening
of home-made erotic/pornographic videos in Show
Your favorite Porn/Bring Your Own Porn. This event equally
caused a big hula hula in the media. It was followed by a double-bill
of performances
by artists Ricky Seabra (Link to www.rickyseabra.com) and Buelens
Pauline vzw (Marijs Boulogne and Manah de Pauw)
Meanwhile, artists Francesca da Rimini (assisted by Agnese Trocchi
and Dale Nason) and Shu lea Cheang initiated a four-day workshop
with university students. Da Rimini's workshop Strange
Packets of Desire was
held in a computer lab and focused on electronically mediated
sexualities. Shu Lea Cheang's Writing for
pornography encouraged
film and theater students to write pornographic (screen) plays.
The next day cable&noise wizards Dorkbot tested out a version
of the game Twister. Zooten Genant arrived from the Netherlands
to carry out their foray into cybersex with Gaze
Back: Surfing precious Porn Waves. This performance, however,
was shut down by the organizers upon advice of the lawyers after
60% of
the artworks had been seized from the museum the day before.
The next day we closed the festival with a voice- performance
by Marijs Boulogne and Manah de Pauw, performances of Digital
Genital and Home Tape Club by
ZootenGenant, an overview of Yoshie Suzuki's Kissing
Project and
student performances that had come out of workshops.
Anybody closely related to the festival was fried at that point.
A rather large Visual and Media Arts exhibit opened
during the first week in the foyer of KC nOna and a joining gallery
of the
Cultural Center of Mechelen. The exhibit featured paintings by
Piepke, a video and photographs by Annie Sprinkle, photographs
from I.K.U. and a digital media piece Expand by
Shu lea Cheang a digital
media piece Dollspace by
Francesca da Rimini, photo-collages by Tom van Ghent, the video Orgasmic
Faces by
Marijs Boulogne, performance-photographs of Meat
Sexu Taco by
ZootenGenant and a video-installation
of their web-based performance piece 8X8X64
Fucking Retreat, my installation piece Sexy
Flowers, photographs by Yoshie Suzuki
and Adam Zaretsky, a video of Suzuki's Kissing
Project and their
enema-video Squart. Finally, a circumcision
triptych by Ricky Seabra.
The Belgian intelligentsia and mass media took pleasure in intervening
in the festival, surprising us frequently with loud and unnanounced
visits, rescripting the festival by focusing on provocative and
'illegal' sex-events, instigating debates around porn and the
destruction of art and humanity. Within this media turmoil, the
hard work of the artists and KC nOna production teams largely
went unnoticed. After the festival, I wrote my own commentary
in the essay Black
Magic Doesn't Swallow.
This account is fragmented and incomplete. I hope that other
artists and intellectuals will write their own reactions. Feel
free to react to the materials or request further information,
by sending me an email (libidot@comcast.net) or posting a message
on the messageboard elsewhere in this site.
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