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#liberated: the radical art and life of claude cahun
transbookoftheday · 10 months
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Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun by Kaz Rowe
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Illustrator Kaz Rowe’s graphic biography Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun, reveals how the creative and courageous Surrealist artist championed freedom at every turn, from rejecting gender norms and finding queer love to risking death to sabotage the Nazis.
At the turn of the 20th century in Nantes, France, Lucy Schwob met Suzanne Malherbe, and lightning struck. The two became partners both artistically and romantically and transformed themselves into the creative personas Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore. Together, the couple embarked on a radical journey of Surrealist collaboration that would take them from conservative provincial France to the vibrancy of 1920s Paris to the oppression of Nazi-occupied Jersey during World War II, where they used art to undermine the Nazi regime.
Cahun and Moore challenged gender roles and championed freedom at a time when strict societal norms meant that the truth of their relationship had to remain secret. Featuring 10 photographs by Cahun and Moore, this graphic biography by cartoonist Kaz Rowe brings Cahun’s inspiring story to life.
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makingqueerhistory · 3 months
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Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun
Kaz Rowe
At the turn of the 20th century in Nantes, France, Lucy Schwob met Suzanne Malherbe, and lightning struck. The two became partners both artistically and romantically and transformed themselves into the creative personas Claude Cahun and Marcel Moore. Together, the couple embarked on a radical journey of Surrealist collaboration that would take them from conservative provincial France to the vibrancy of 1920s Paris to the oppression of Nazi-occupied Jersey during World War II, where they used art to undermine the Nazi regime. Cahun and Moore challenged gender roles and championed freedom at a time when strict societal norms meant that the truth of their relationship had to remain secret. Featuring 10 photographs by Cahun and Moore, this graphic biography by cartoonist Kaz Rowe brings Cahun's inspiring story to life.
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queerliblib · 4 months
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Hello. I'm someone with ADHD and have a pretty hard time reading books that don't have any pictures or illustrations. There are plenty of ya books, manga, and graphic novels out there, but I have been wanting to expand my horizons.
So I was wondering if you had any recommendations of books in your collection that have pictures, that aren't part of the 3 categories above?
Thanks in advance.
Hello! hmmm right, that’s tricky. Here’s a few that we’ve got that don’t fit the categories above, but definitely include illustrations (not sure to what extent in each though)
The Ex-Girlfriend of My Girlfriend is My Girlfriend
Let Me Out - doesn’t bill itself as a graphic novel, but does look a bit like one
Liberated: The radical life and art of Claude Cahun
The Pride Atlas - lots of photographs
Bordered Lives: Transgender Portraits from Mexico
queer, some illustration or photography, not yet in our collection;
She of the Mountains by Vivek Shreya
Queer as all get out by Shelby Criswell
The Fire Never Goes Out: a Memoir in Pictures by N.D. Stevenson
Oh, Luna Fortuna by Stacy Bias
We are Everywhere: Protest, Power, and Pride in the History of Queer Liberation
The Invisibles: Vintage Portraits of Love and Pride 
There are a lot of great graphic novels out there beyond the traditional superhero comic style.. so we really are missing a lot of possibilities by cutting those out. the borders between graphic novel, and illustrated book are also very nebulous!
we had some success searching things like “illustrated adult fiction” but then not all of those are going to be queer
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I’ve been reading lots of graphic novels lately! Here are some of my favorite historical nonfiction graphic novels I’ve read!
“Nat Turner” By Kyle Baker
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A recollection of the Nat Turner rebellion. One thing I loved about this graphic novel is that it was composed entirely of illustrations except for one place where it says “BOOM!”. This really allowed me to take my time absorbing the drawings. Sometimes with other graphic novels my eyes are following the words out of habit and ignoring illustrations. However, it did also include a few pages interspersed throughout the book with paragraphs explaining what is happening with historical facts so you don’t get confused.
“Liberated: The Radical Life and Art of Claude Cahun” by Kaz Rowe
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I found out about this graphic novel because I am a big fan of Kaz Rowe’s YouTube video essays on queer history. (Check that out if it sounds like you). So I have been anxiously awaiting this novels release. It follows the life of French, Jewish, nonbinary, lesbian Claude Cahun during World War II as they use propaganda to fight the Germans. The art style and story were so engaging and I really hope Kaz Rowe chooses to illustrate more queer history like this.
“Power Born of Dreams: My story is Palestine” by Mohammad Sabaaneh
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I had not heard of this graphic novel but I stumbled across it at my library and had to check it out. It was written and illustrated by a Palestinian artist who was a political prisoner in Israeli prisons for 5 months in 2013. He tells his story and the story of several Palestinians in this beautiful linocut printed graphic novel. I also loved that in the back of the book it had ten or so pages of text explaining the historical context in which he wrote the book. Right now this is a must read, and it took me less than 2 hours to read the whole thing so give it a shot.
“The Black Panther Party: A Graphic Novel History” by David F. Walker
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Growing up in the core of Appalachian America, much of my public school education was lacking in the history department. All throughout school we never got to more recent history than the beginnings of the Red Scare. All this to say I had no education on the Black Panther Party before reading this graphic novel. I found it was a very helpful introduction to the Black Panther movement in all of its complexities, and I have enjoyed reading more about it since then. Obviously, if you already are well informed on the Black Panther Party this may be too baseline for you. But, if like me, the American Education System failed you, give this book a try.
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readwfairy · 1 year
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Liberated - the radical art and life of Claude Cahun
By Claude Cahun
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Hyperallergic: 100 Years of Queer British Art, from Fin de Siècle Aesthetics to Performative Dandyism
Simeon Solomon, “Sappho and Erinna in a Garden at Mytilene” (1864) (all images courtesy of Tate Photography)
LONDON — Showcasing the diverse story behind a convoluted centenary of queer British art cannot be an easy task. For Queer British Art 1861–1967, not only has the Tate included works in an array of creative mediums — painting, sculpture, photography — but it has displayed these works along with artifacts intended to historicize the accompanying art. Although the exhibition shows a strong attempt to represent a wide range of queer experience, certain gaps emerge, leaving the viewer with many unanswered questions.
There are four components to the gallery’s new exhibition: heritage, queerness, art, and nationality, and the interconnectivity between these subjects is its focus. Divided into eight spaces, the show moves chronologically from the UK’s abolition of the death penalty for sodomy in 1861 to its 1967 Sexual Offences Act, which included the partial decriminalization of homosexuality. This queer chronicle, curator Clare Barlow said during her gallery tour, “is framed by legal landmarks, but the artists’ self-liberation is the real story of the show.” Each room is designed to serve as a chapter in this narrative.
Queer British Art, installation view
Queer British Art, installation view
The opening scene is set by Victorian artist Simeon Solomon, whose work greets visitors as they enter the exhibition’s first room, Coded Desires. The selected Solomon works, which include ink-and-graphite studies of the male form such as “Babylon hath been a golden cup” (1859) and “The Bride, Bridegroom and Sad Love” (1865), set the tone of veiled sexuality for this introductory space. His use of religious themes in conjunction with an exploration of same-sex desire reflects the subtlety necessary for 19th-century depictions of queer experience.
Fanny and Stella: famous cross-dressers
Along with Solomon, “Aurora Triumphans” (1877-8) by Evelyn de Morgan and a copy of Walter Pater’s “Studies in the History of the Renaissance” (1873) are displayed here. The Tate relies on the interpretative potential of the speculatively queer works within Coded Desires, describing William Blake Richmond’s 1870 painting “The Bowlers” as “open to homoerotic interpretation.”
Moving away from the mid-century influences of the Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood toward fin de siècle Aestheticism, the theme of the second room, Public Indecency, explores how sexuality and gender identity subsisted in a public sphere in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Portraits of sexologist Henry Havelock Ellis, activist Edward Carpenter, and writer Radclyffe Hall illustrate this room’s exploration of the scandals, legal confrontations, scientific studies, and social campaigns that shaped public views of queer life at the turn of the century. A portrait of Oscar Wilde at age 27 is hung parallel on the wall to his prison door, a striking reminder of his downfall. The notorious illustrations of Aubrey Beardsley, Wilde’s collaborator, are situated next to paraphernalia from the great writer’s infamous trial. Jacques-Émile Blanche’s 1895 portrait of Beardsley captures the young man’s acute sense of style and meticulous attire.
Queer British Art, installation view
Queer British Art, installation view
The performativity of dandyism leads the viewer on to room three, which pays homage to “theatrical” as ancient subtext for “queer.” Populated by cross-dressing music hall performers, surrealist photographers, and avant-garde stage artists, the Theatrical Types room features Jimmy Slater’s diamante earrings, portraits shot by Cecil Beaton and Angus McBean, an 1894 programme for The Blackmailers, which featured the first depiction of a same-sex relationship on the British stage, and Noel Coward’s dressing gown.
The dark Victorian galleries, painted deep maroon, here give way to a brighter space, dominated by Duncan Grant’s large 1911 modernist painting, “Bathing.” The Bloomsbury group as queer modern “experiment,” a community which famously “lived in squares and loved in triangles,” is the focus of room four. Bloomsbury and Beyond highlights the theme of intimacy in works by Gluck, Dora Carrington, and Ethel Walker.
Duncan Grant, “Bathing” (1911)
Henry Scott Tuke, “The Critics” (1927)
Hannah Gluckstein, “Gluck” (1942)
Challenged gender norms come into discussion in Defying Convention, room five. The radical societal changes during the First and Second World Wars became a period of liberating possibilities for many British women, which is highlighted by the inclusion of Claude Cahun’s photographs and William Strang’s 1918 portrait of Vita Sackville-West, “Lady with a Red Hat.”
William Strang, “Lady with a Red Hat”
As the narrative moves into the postwar era, London as queer art central in the 1950s and ’60s is explored in room six, Arcadia and Soho. Featuring paintings by Edward Burra and graphite sketches by Keith Vaughan, the room’s theme of queered geography is reflected next door, in Public/Private Lives. Although the focus of this space is the collaged book covers, created by artist couple Joe Orton and Kenneth Halliwell by borrowing library books and creating new covers to be returned to the shelves, a hidden gem here is the photograph album. This anonymous document is a private erotic project, compiled by someone with an interest in jodhpurs and guardsmen.
Queer British Art, assorted photographs by Claude Cahun
The exhibition gives over its final gallery room to Francis Bacon and David Hockney, exploring how the work of these two artists exploited the homoerotic potential of the visual culture of ‘60s Britain. Their controversial artwork is informed by a variety of sources, from Eadweard Muybridge’s innovative photographs of wrestlers to bodybuilding magazines.  
Although the four central themes of the exhibition interweave to provide context for the objects displayed, they also serve to highlight the absences that emerge in any narrative of historical queer British art. Attempts to fully represent the endlessly diverse face of queer British art can be valiant but will always be unsuccessful, and the hidden histories of this creative world are further obfuscated by societal reinscribing of LGBT+ life. Wider society has modified and restricted how queer communities self-express: concealed and coded, banned and blamed, the heritage of the queer experience is, as the Tate puts it in the exhibition catalogue, “punctuated by bonfires and dustbins.” Britain as the homeland of this queer art confuses this narrative: In a divided society, the public “face” of queer art is tempered by the restrictions of gender, class, and ethnicity.
Queer British Art, installation view
Queer British Art, installation view
We are left wondering: In a society that the exhibition claims “tolerated” lesbian relationships, why do we not see more female voices represented? How does race intersect with the narrative of queer British art? What was life like for queer creative people outside the artistic elite, at any point in the century this exhibit represents? As a result, while an engaging and thought-provoking exhibition, Queer British Art 1861–1967 has a great many gaps in its narrative, leaving the viewer with more questions than answers.
Queer British Art, installation view
Queer British Art 1861–1967 continues at Tate Britain (Millbank, Westminster, London) through October 1.
The post 100 Years of Queer British Art, from Fin de Siècle Aesthetics to Performative Dandyism appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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makingqueerhistory · 19 days
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Queer History Books for Different Age Groups
Connecting younger people with their history is vital, so here are some resources to start that journey!
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Kapaemahu
Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu (Author) Dean Hamer (Author) Joe Wilson (Author) Daniel Sousa (Illustrator)
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Desert Queen
Jyoti Rajan Gopal (Author) Svabhu Kohli (Illustrator)
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Queer Ducks (and Other Animals): The Natural World of Animal Sexuality
Eliot Schrefer (Author) Jules Zuckerberg (Illustrator)
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Liberated: The Radical Art and Life of Claude Cahun
Kaz Rowe (Author)
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300,000 Kisses: Tales of Queer Love from the Ancient World
Seán Hewitt (Author) Luke Edward Hall (Author)
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The LGBTQ + History Book
DK
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