Explicit
“You can be the ripest, juciest peach, and there’s still going to be somebody who hates peaches.” -Dita Von Teese
Animals crave sex. It is our biological calling to engage with one another in order to carry on the species into the future. Over time, humans have approached their own sexuality from some startling angles. At once revered and admonished, sex is the thing of which we mustn’t speak and yet it is all around us. We live and breathe sex whether we know it or not. It is used to sell us things, to make us watch television and movies, it can make and break careers – and lives. We live in an era when sex has taken on new dimensions both in terms of freedom and consent. Artists are perhaps the few among us who can truly push the boundaries.
Chas Ray Krider is currently starting to dive into a series of self-published books of work that has yet to be seen. Meanwhile, he is making the prints in the book available online. Krider has shopped around for internet platforms for his work. A favorite of his is Zno, a service he says produces prints that are the truest to the character of his work as he intends.
In the past, Krider’s work has been produced by major publishing houses. The drive to do self-publishing is an attempt to codify his work, so to speak, for his own satisfaction. Additionally, self publication gives him freedom from being pigeon-holed within a certain publishing division.
Kriden’s work explores the world of erotic art. One printed volume ended up with the name Motel Fetish and the moniker began to define how he was seen as an artist. Eventually, Kriden chose to move away from this label. His self-published work is one way to diversify the way his art is seen.
In the beginning of his career, Kriden worked as a photographer in many areas. He moved toward the studio and, as he did so, his work became more conceptual and increasingly sexual. Kriden devised a concept in which he photographed in motel rooms as a way for audiences to suspend disbelief in such a familiar setting. The work was heavily narrative involving clear story lines between the models in the photographs. A friend working in magazines published some of this work and it became a style synonymous with Kriden as an artist.
Eventually he realized that he didn’t want to do the same style of art forever. His work started becoming more stripped down, less involved backgrounds. The work still features nude and semi-nude models but photographed in minimalist spaces. Krider painted the floor and walls of his studio white. Here he photographs his models without the interference of many props. Krider doesn’t direct his models per se, though he does fine tune their movements.
For example, Krider might ask a model to shake her head, letting long hair fly. This movement with a slow shutter speed allows for a clear image of the body but a frantic, out-of-focus head. The juxtaposition might infer the concept of insanity.
Krider is a full-time artist despite his modest claim that everyone needs a hobby. He lives a “low overhead” lifestyle, supporting himself with his art.
Kriden works essentially for himself with little thought for how his work will be perceived by an audience. At this point in his career he doesn’t need to solicit models as they find him. His track record and body of work speak for themselves and every interaction with models is consensual. He begins by exploring what his models’ boundaries are before work begins.
Kriden prefers to let the audience decide things. This is one reason he likes art books as a vehicle. In this way, his art falls into the hands of those who wish to view it as opposed to mounting an exhibit where his work could be encountered by anyone coming in off the street. With books comes intention from both creator and audience. He also prefers to separate himself from the work as much as he can, choosing instead to let the work seep out into the world detached from its creator.
In the late nineties, Kriden work with burlesque maven Dita Von Teese. At the time she was still in her twenties and taking off as a model. She already had a cult following and Kriden could tell at the time that she was someone who would go far. Over a two year period, the two worked together several times in different cities.
To hear more about Chas Ray Krider’s work and life as a photographer, listen to the complete interview.
A Few Words to Keep in your Pocket:
The human form finds itself at once familiar and taboo.
Interviews are available on iTunes as podcasts, and for Android please click here. All weekly essay pieces in a shareable format are here. The full archive of interviews here.
Books to Read
What are you reading? Add your titles to our reading list here. Chas Ray Krider’s nightstand supports The Western Lands by William S. Burroughs, which he is reading for about the fifth time, as well as a biographical volume about the surrealists.
Opportunities / Open Calls
Do you have an adventurous spirit and an interest in creating wearable art? Right now the World of Wearable Art Competition (WOW) is accepting submissions for the 2019 cycle. Winners will have their art worn on stage at the World of Wearable Art awards show and receive a cash prize. For more details about this unusual opportunity, check out the WOW website. Deadline is March 29.
Deadlines
Weekly Edited Grant and Residency Deadlines – review the list here.
Have You Done This Yet in 2019?
Did you give yourself some rest and respite during the holidays? If so, welcome back to reality (so to speak) and let’s dive right back in! There is no better time than right now to start lining up applications for the year. Submitting work to grant cycles, residencies and competitions is easily as important as the other aspects of your art career. Prioritizing time for applications is critical and should be a regular feature in your time management. Here are a few upcoming opportunities scattered across the next couple of months to get you going.
Professional visual artists (that’s you) are invited to apply to the artist in residence program and Bernheim Arboretum and Research Forest. This residency, in its third decade, has lured artists from around the world to work in the beauty of the natural world. Up to four artists per year are awarded residency and there is a stipend available. For further details and to apply, visit the website. Deadline is January 21.
Etant donnés offers grants to American curators wishing to conduct and deepen their research in contemporary art in France. These grants are intended to expand the opportunities of American curators, to encourage in-depth explorations of French cultural resources, and to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and knowledge among artists, professionals, researchers, and institutions. Candidates are encouraged to connect with art professionals and other researchers as well as with institutions, universities, art schools, or private and public archives in preparation for future exhibitions or collaborations. For complete details and to apply, visit the website. Deadline is February 1.
Do you have an adventurous spirit and an interest in creating wearable art? Right now the World of Wearable Art Competition (WOW) is accepting submissions for the 2019 cycle. Winners will have their art worn on stage at the World of Wearable Art awards show and receive a cash prize. For more details about this unusual opportunity, check out the WOW website. Deadline is March 29.
Praxis Center guides you step by step through the application process. As part of your membership you receive access to our courses for professional artists including modules on time management and how to apply for grants from beginning to end. The very first step is to identify opportunities that are right for you and make sure to block out time in your calendar to complete your applications on time. Join today for just $40/month and see where we can take you this year.
Photo credit: Bernheim Arboretum & Research Forest
Get Going!
Momentum is a beautiful thing. Once achieved, it can push you forward at a pace you’d never have thought possible. Of course, it takes work to build momentum, you have to be willing to begin and that can be the hardest part. Beginning requires the belief that this journey will be worth it. It requires the courage to break down your obstacles and step outside your comfort zone. But more often than not, our students find that once they get the ball rolling things have a way of picking up energy and speed and before they know it, life changing things are happening around every corner.
Take Praxis student Heather’s story for example. She was able to clear the way to sit with Praxis for a while and discovered that it sparked a whole lot of forward motion. In her own words (and emoji) –
“Happy New Year! I’m finally at a point where I can focus on all the great information at Praxis and get all the assignments done. Brainard Carey, you’d be so proud of me. I’ve contacted over 70 amazing people who inspire me, since the year began, inviting them to become muses I am partnering with as focal points for 100 pieces I am putting into an art book to be published Fall of 2020. I’ve already completed 10 and have documented everything about their creation so I can make creative spotlight videos. 40% of those people have already gotten back to me with expressed interest. My website and artist information is coming together with the help of your classes and video gems. Lot’s of upgrades still evolving but I have a good base now to start.“
That’s the power of Praxis Center. When our students take the time and put their minds to the material we have to offer, they unlock doors they never thought possible. Opportunity is there waiting for you if you know where to look. When you join Praxis for just $40/month, you are given the keys to your future. We give you the motivation to get started and before you know it you’ll be on a roll.
When
“When someone blamed Hecataeus the sophist because that, being invited to the public table, he had not spoken one word all supper-time, Archidamidas answered in his vindication ‘He who knows how to speak, knows also when’.” -Plutarch
Know when. That is, as you move through your life, listen to the vibrations around you and know when to speak, when to act, when to move and indeed, when not to. We must, all of us, take in to account the complex workings of the world around us and never presume to know what others are thinking and feeling at any given moment. Our words and actions may feel blameless and neutral to ourselves, but to those around us they could harbor layers we never predicted.
Leslie Wayne is an artist living and working in New York. She spoke to us from her studio in Hell’s Kitchen. She has a show opening on February 22 for which she is working on one last paining that she hopes to finish before the show. The series for this exhibition represent a change for Wayne, typically an abstract painter, in that it reflects this particular moment in that it speaks to the current political discourse. The series reflects her anxiety for the current state of affairs.
One series depicts windows with things seeping in or with damage. The other shows closets, often at unusual angles, indicating secrets kept among other metaphors. For the closet series, the shape of the painting is the shape of the object making them sculptural paintings. Inside the closets Wayne paints things are not orderly, a reflection perhaps of how she feels about the time we are living in now. With this show, Wayne explores trompe l’oeil and verisimilitude.
Wayne allows as how she feels we face an ominous future unless things change fast. This reflects in her work in many ways, both obvious and more subtle. At times her images are tremendously powerful leaving no question what her message is. Other times her intent speaks in a softer voice but still points in this same direction.
Please give yourself some time to hear Leslie Wayne discuss her prescient work by listening to the complete interview.
Reyna spoke to us from the South of France where she lives and works. Her studio is in the country near Toulouse. Reyna works on multiple projects at the same time. She paints as well as working in video and other media.
Some of Reyna’s work depicts very large scale representations of animals. She also explores gender in her work, examining how man and woman were created and inspects the mythology surrounding gender. She investigates the three genders, that is the male, female and male/female combined. She draws on myth as well as her own imagination for the work. Reyna also refers to texts to influence her work.
She creates video art that corresponds with her paintings. The video art focuses on the words that inspire and reflect her work. Within the bounds of her work, gender and sexuality are very fluid constructs.
Another theme in her work is sand on the beach. She creates large drawings and makes corresponding videos. She dances to feel her body and then makes big drawings to capture this.
To hear Reyna discuss her work more in depth, including her discussing of the beaches she depicts, take a few moments to listen to the complete interview.
A Few Words to Keep in your Pocket:
Listen to your surroundings. And know when.
Interviews are available on iTunes as podcasts, and for Android please click here. All weekly essay pieces in a shareable format are here. The full archive of interviews here.
Books to Read
What are you reading? Add your titles to our reading list here. Leslie Wayne is reading Heidegger Among the Sculptors by Andrew Mitchell. Reyna is reading a lot of philosophy and poetry of late, including the works of the Sophists.
Opportunities
Artist Grant provides a one-time $500 award to a visual artist four times each year. The grant is open to all visual artists aged 18 or older working in any media. Note that theater, dance and music are not eligible. There are separate deadlines for each quarter. The first upcoming deadline is January 15 followed by the 15th of April, July and October for the other three cycles.
Weekly Edited Grant and Residency Deadlines – review the list here.