Classic Kink (Part I)
@ Smart Museum of Art
5550 S Greenwood Ave, Chicago, IL 60637
Opening Thursday, May 4th, from 6PM - 8PM
The Smart Museum of Art, Office of LGBTQ Student Life – The University of Chicago, and the Leather Archives & Museum are partnering for a special two-part program that explores classicism in relation to the history of LGBTQ communities.
FREE, but space is limited. Please RSVP in advance.
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Part I
Thursday, May 4, 6–8 pm
Smart Museum of Art
5550 S. Greenwood Avenue
Part I features a tour of the Smart Museum’s special exhibition Classicisms, including a set of nineteenth-century photographs of suggestively posed young men amid Roman ruins. Led by Benjamin Morgan, Assistant Professor, Department of English Language and Literature, the conversation will focus on the public and private dissemination of LGBTQ culture through the clandestine trading of images in the Victorian era, as well as the validation that can come from the deployment classical aesthetics. This discussion will be followed by a figure drawing session where participants will create works in response to the exhibition and discussion.
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Part II
Thursday, May 11, 6–8 pm
Leather Archives & Museum
6418 N. Greenview Avenue
Part II features a discussion of the history and future of Chicago’s active LGBTQ community and a tour of classically-themed 1960s and 70s physique photography and murals by Chuck Renslow and Etienne at the at the Leather Archives & Museum, which preserves the history and culture of fetish, kink, and leather communities in Chicago. Following the tour, the UChicago student organization RACK (Risk-Aware Consensual Kink) will give a demonstration about the aesthetics and safe practice of contemporary kink.
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Presented by the Smart Museum of Art, the Office of LGBTQ Student Life at the University of Chicago, and the Leather Archives & Museum. Support for this program has been provided by UChicago Arts Grants.
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Image: Guglielmo (Wilhelm von) Plüschow, House of Marcus Lucretius, Pompeii (detail), undated, Albumen print Alma-Tadema Collection, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham, Cat. AT 7988.
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