Title
Cruising Pavilion
Go Home
Category
Description
Cruising Pavilion is a curatorial project about contemporary gay sex, architecture and cruising cultures curated by Pierre-Alexandre Mateos, Rasmus Myrup, Octave Perrault and Charles Teyssou.
Address
Phone Number
+1 609-831-2326 (US) | Message me
Site Icon
Cruising Pavilion
Page Views
0
Share
Update Time
2022-06-18 20:27:37

"I love Cruising Pavilion"

www.cruisingpavilion.com VS www.gqak.com

2022-06-18 20:27:37

[email protected] @cruisingpavilion Cruising Pavilion, Stockholm@ ArkDes, Stockholm, SwedenSeptember 20 – November 10 2019+Andreas AngelidakisMonica BonviciniTom BurrShu Lea CheangVictoria ColmegnaEarl Combs + Steve OstrowEtienne DesclouxDiller Scofidio + RenfroDYKE_ONPol Esteve + Marc NavarroGeneral IdeaRobert GetsoHorace GiffordSidsel Meineche HansenNguyen Tan HoangAndrés Jaque (Office for Political Innovation)Studio KarhardAnn Krsul + Amy Cappellazzo + Alexis Roworth + Sarah DrakeJohn LindellHenrik OlesenPuppies Puppies (Jade Kuriki Olivo)Hannah Quinlan + Rosie HastingsCarlos ReyesPrem SahibJaanus SammaS H U I (Jon Wang + Sean Roland)Max Sohl + Paul MorrisCharles Terrell + Bruce MailmanTommy TingMadelon VriesendorpSteven WarwickRobert YangTrevor Yeung ❮ ❯ Photos by Johan Dehlin PRESS RELEASE: (click here to download)Presenting the many facets of cruising culture through the work of international architects, designers and artists, Cruising Pavilion explores a sexual and spatial practice that spans historical and contemporary culture. The combination of digital hook-up apps, urban development, and the commodification of LGBTQ+ (Lesbian, Gay, Transgender, Bisexual and Queer +) cultures means that traditional cruising grounds are continually adapting. Geospatial technologies have generated a psychosexual geography that spreads across digitally-connected homes and profiles.The exhibition presents cruising as the producer of a non-hetero architecture that closely mirrors the patriarchal nature of the built environment. Cruising is at once revealed as a resistance, an avant-garde and a vernacular, with an active relevance in and beyond LGBTQ+ circles.Cruising Pavilion at ArkDes is the culmination of two years of research. Previous exhibitions of the project in Venice, Italy (Spazio Punch), and New York City, USA (Ludlow38), have explored the different directions by which cruising practices have evolved. In this third and final edition, Cruising Pavilion focuses on the intersection of sexuality and the architecture of the city. ❮ ❯ Photos by Peter HansenBOOKLET: (click here to download)Download the booklet that accompanied the exhibtion, with texts on each contributior and contribution, a foreword by Kieran Long, an exhibtion map, and an introductory text for each section of the exhibition. Cruising Pavilion, New York@ Ludlow 38, New York, USAFebruary 22 – April 7 2019+Ann Krsul, Amy Cappellazzo, Alexis Roworth & Sarah DrakeCarlos ReyesCharles TerrellDeSe EscobarHorace GiffordJohn LindellJürgen Mayer H.Kayode OjoMadelon VriesendorpMaud EscudiéPhilipp TimischlRobert GetsoRobert YangShu Lea CheangNguyen Tan Hoangand Victoria Colmegna ❮ ❯ PRESS RELEASE: (click here to download)The first chapter of Cruising Pavilion opened in parallel to the 2018 Venice Architecture Biennale. The exhibition presented different understandings of cruising by looking at the various spaces and architectures that are either appropriated, like public sites, or designed, like sex clubs and dating apps. ‘Cruising’ usually describes the quest for sexual encounters between homosexual men in public or dedicated spaces, but it cannot be reduced to either men or gays. From this intricate and changing relationship between cruising, sexuality and space, Cruising Pavilion, Venice investigated the different directions in which cruising practices have evolved.Cruising Pavilion, New York looks at the city’s conflictual architectures of cruising, both lost, living and potential. Has New York become the puritan heaven described by some? While the Venetian version of the project connected minimal art with BDSM and architecture, this chapter is rooted in the libidinal history of club culture. The de-sexualization of disco and house music and their mutations into the official anthem of ‘happy globalization’ have obscured their origins, which were notably embodied by the Continental Baths in the basement of The Ansonia Hotel in New York City. Founded in 1968 by Steve Orlow, it comprised of a dancefloor, a cabaret lounge, sauna rooms, steam rooms, a roman swimming pool, an upscale restaurant, a hair salon, 400 individual rooms, two large orgy rooms, and an STD clinic. This sexual power plant hybridized the French discothèque model with the social ambitions of Soviet workers’ clubs breaking social hierarchies in order to generate unplanned bodily collisions and release a critical dose of sweat, sperm, and saliva. Since then, New York has been the ‘Teatro Olimpico’ of architecture’s sexual experiments—from Fire Island’s woodclad sex havens of the ‘60s to The Saint’s kinetic pleasure dome of the ‘80s and the Lesbian Xanadu manifesto of the ‘90s, the metropolis applied the culture of congestion to dissident bodies, and injected poppers and LSD directly into the sensual production of space.Cruising is the thermometer of metropolitan health. Following Charles Jencks’ definition of postmodern cities as machines for sustaining difference, it appears that the relation between the metropolis and cruising is crucial for measuring its capacity to host and generate new ways of thinking, loving, living, belonging and allying. Eat, pray, love like Henri Lefebvre! Sadly, the recent hygienization of New York’s sex culture has reached an urbanistic climax that has led the city to metabolize its own sexual monuments to AIDS and cruising, like the piers. Moreover the privatization of its sexual future is delegating cruising to corporations—homogenizing sexual fantasies, fetishes and practices. It is urgent for architects, artists, programmers, game designers, and activists to invent new sexual strategies for continuing New York’s cruising experiments. To think along the lines of Paul B. Preciado, it seems vital to perform increasingly intricate gender cut-ups, build sexual constructivist montages and appropriate body normative dating apps to create new forms of queer situationist dérives. Re-deploy imaginations of desire! Re-occupy public spaces! Re-engage radical hospitality! Cruising Pavilion, New York believes that cruising is not obsolete and that public sex remains a laboratory for political futures and spaces.Cruising Pavilion, New York is produced in collaboration with Ludlow 38’s curator-in-residence Franziska Sophie Wildförster. It is the second chapter of the curatorial project on gay sex, architecture and cruising cultures by Pierre-Alexandre Mateos, Rasmus Myrup, Octave Perrault and Charles Teyssou. The third and last edition will take place in the Autumn of 2019 at ArkDes in Stockholm, Sweden. ❮ ❯BOOKLET: (click here to download)Download the booklet that accompanied the exhibtion, with texts on each contributior, the press release and an introduction by Franziska Sophie Wildförster. The booklet was layouted and typeset by Bruno Mokross. Cruising Pavilion, Venice16th Architecture Biennale @ Spazio Punch, Giudecca, Italy24 May - 1 July 2018+ Alison Veit Andreas Angelidakis Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation Atelier Aziz Alqatami Carlos Reyes Diller Scofidio + Renfro DYKE_ON Etienne Descloux Hannah Quinlan & Rosie Hastings Henrik Olesen Ian Wooldridge S H U Í (Jon Wang & Sean Roland) Lili Reynaud Dewar Pascal Cribier & Louis Benech Monica Bonvicini Studio Karhard Studio Odile Decq Özgür Kar Pol Esteve & Marc Navarro Prem Sahib Tom Burr Trevor Yeung ❮ ❯ PRESS RELEASE: (click here to download)Cruising usually describes the quest for sexual encounters between homosexual men in public spaces, but it cannot be reduced to neither men nor homos. This sexual practice generally takes place in public sites like parks, toilets, and parking lots, or in dedicated establishments like bathhouses and sex clubs.From the 19th century Vauxhall pleasure gardens in London to the 80’s Mineshaft BDSM club in New York, the Cruising Pavilion looks at the conflictual architecture of cruising. Somewhere between anti-architecture and vernacular, the spatial and aesthetic logic of cruising is inseparable from the one of the proper metropolis. Cruising is the illegitimate child of hygienist morality. Relegated to the realm of depravity, it feeds off its most structuring disciplinary features. In the bathrooms built for cleanliness and the parks made for peacefulness, the modern city is cruised , dismantled and made into a drag of itself. The dungeon becomes playful, the labyrinth protective, and the baths erotic. If “architectural discourse is a deodorizer”, then cruising is the powerful human smell that haunts the dreams of Jean Genet.The historical model of cruising is evolving and perhaps even dying. The contemporary combination of Grindr, urban development and the commodification of LGBT culture has emptied established cruising grounds and replaced gay bars with condos. Geosocial apps have generated a new psychosexual geography spreading across a vast architectonic of digitally interconnected bedrooms, thus disrupting the intersectional idealism that was at play in former versions of cruising. Today, class, race and gender might be as regulated by the erotic surface of the screen as the architecture of the city.By featuring contributions from artists and architects, the Cruising Pavilion wishes to highlight the failure to consider Freespace as defined by this edition of the Venice Architecture Biennale, without questioning the hetero-normative production of space itself. Architecture is a sexual practice and cruising is one of the most crucial acts of dissidence.The Cruising Pavilion is a project curated by Pierre-Alexandre Mateos, Rasmus Myrup, Octave Perrault and Charles Teyssou that will take place at Spazio Punch in Venice, Italy from the 24th May to 1st July, during the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale. It is produced in collaboration with Spazio Punch.Since 2011, Spazio Punch has been a non-profit Venetian organization on the Giudecca Island that promotes contemporary culture through events, exhibitions and talks. ❮ ❯ The Garden of Eden used to be the notorious Venetian cruising ground from the end of the Belle Époque until the Second World War which particularly marked French and Italian literature. It was visited by Anna de Noaïlles, Eleanora Duse, Baron Corvo, Walter Sickert, Jean-Louis Vaudoyer, Gabriele d’Annunzio; it was cruised by Rainer Maria Rilke, Henry James, Marcel Proust and Jean Cocteau; and has been fantasized about by Renaud Camus, the author of the famous cruising novel Tricks (1979) prefaced by Roland Barthes.The Cruising Pavilion made a few urgent revisions to the statements on “Freespace” made by the curators of the 16th International Architecture Exhibition​, Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara: AboutCruising Pavilion is a curatorial project about the architecture of gay sex and cruising culture.It was initiated in Paris, during Winter 2018 by Pierre-Alexandre Mateos, Rasmus Myrup, Octave Perrault and Charles Teyssou on the occasion of the 16th Venice Architecture Biennale.Pierre-Alexandre Mateos, b. 1989, France, & Charles Teyssou, b. 1988, France, are a duo of curators and art critics.Rasmus Myrup, b. 1991, Denmark, is an artist and curator.Octave Perrault, b. 1988, France, is an architect and writerLogo type: West Side Club font, 2018Typeface concept: Carlos Reyes for Cruising PavilionTypeface design: Dinamo ​with Laurence FavezClick here to download the font