Blanche Devereaux with
Giant Boner
Read on for the story of its making:
My friend Bobby (name changed for anonymity’s sake, although
given the above I’m not sure why he wouldn’t want a bit of credit) read my book,
and we had a bottle of wine between us and started chatting about it one night.
Bobby identifies as predominantly into
men, cisgender (for those playing the home game, a cisgender trait is where
one’s behavioral/mental gender and birth gender match in a given circumstance),
hypersexual, mostly active. I’ve blogged
about why we might exhibit these characteristics before,
and it’s not about birth gender in the least.
“[The book] made me think about what attractions I do have
to women. And I really have none,” he
said.
“Everyone’s different.
Sexuality is more like a fingerprint than a gender or an
orientation. Like you, you’re hypersexual,
predominately same-sex interested, very active/toppy. But you still exhibit some behaviors that are
stereotyped as ‘feminine,’” I told Bobby.
“Like a love of Golden Girls?” he asked, and I think he might
have been joking…
“I know you’re really only into dudes, but you do that same
kind of rewriting and reconceptualizing that pervades No Church in the Wild because you neglect to consider all the parts
of you that aren’t a perfect match for your birth gender. I like football,
that’s not really ‘feminine’ in the stereotypical sense. And loving Golden Girls isn’t stereotypical ‘manly’
for you either. But if you destroy the
dichotomy of gender and stop trying to fit yourself into one of two imperfect
boxes with everything you do, you’ll see your have more in common with the
Golden Girls than you have different. Did
you ever identify with a biological female? Like, have a female heroine? Maybe,
divaesque?”
“Indeed. Blanche Devereaux,” Bobby said.
At that precise moment in our lives Bobby happened to have
much free time. I am a painter from time
to time, and I haven’t had a good live model in about eight years. In the interim, I’ve painted myself. But now, I had a thought.
“Would you model for me?” I asked him. It was too good to be true. His sexuality (though obviously not his birth
gender) - hell, even his personality - was pretty much identical to that of
Blanche Devereaux. Playful hypersexual
who pursues men actively and frequently.
Only men.
“Naked?” Bobby asked, tentative.
“Ideally.”
“I don’t know if I want people to see my face.”
“They don’t need to see your face…” I explained. Because it would be Blanche’s.
I told Bobby he could keep his clothes if he needed to when
he showed up at my apartment to sit. But
we both agreed Blanche would be naked.
We’re all ultimately, naked, after all, if we’re portrayed
realistically. Clothes hide a painful
amount of expression. As he sat, I asked
him what struck him about Blanche and watched as his body followed his
thoughts, waiting for the perfect Blanche moment.
“What about my penis?” he asked.
“Is the part of you that identifies as Blanch Devereaux
sexual?”
“Absolutely.”
“Then I suppose this being would be erect… I want to paint
the part of you that feels like Blanche Devereaux. That being is genderless and both genders at
once…if you’re comfortable with that?”
“No,” Bobby said, “ I think you’re right. She’d be erect.”
“She’s pretty much always erect, as far as I can tell.”
Bobby was eventually able to manifest Blanche’s erection,
but only if he handled the erection piece outside of our modeling session,
during which he reclined on my bed, interchangeably smoking weed and drinking,
with gay porn on in the background, while I photographed him until the perfect
Blanche moment emerged.
I chose an image of Blanche from an episode where she was
extra-flirty, as she comments flippantly about a lover. It reminded me of Bobby.
So, here you have it – my painted expression of the end of
gender and sexuality dichotomies a la No Church in the Wild. If you like, comment. I plan to do a series of gay men channeling
Golden Girls. I’ve already got a
wonderful expression for a Sophia.
I love the story and explanation behind this. The painting itself is a little difficult for me just because the angle of her/his head is very "off" from the neck. But I love the Golden Girls and I love how this painting came about. Well done!
ReplyDelete