COLLIER SCHORR.My college roommate was from New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , and for the first semester at our midwestern school she was overcome by the exotic charms of the few lumbering, corn-fed lads in attendance. Being rather more homegrown myself, I thought them at best dim, at worst a little scary. Collier Schorr sees them both ways. In her latest show, boys will be boys, for once; this is a rare nonautobiographical exhibition for Schorr, a case where her subjects aren't her stunt doubles. Instead, there is an anthropological cast to the wrestlers and soldiers and assorted teens photographed here, grimacing as Schorr probes their masculinity. With their athletic gear and hormonal intensity, they are unmistakably "foreign" (although they are indistinguishably both German and American), and even a little frightening--you can almost smell them in the neutered neu·ter adj. 1. Grammar a. Neither masculine nor feminine in gender. b. Neither active nor passive; intransitive. Used of verbs. 2. a. Chelsea gallery space. Blunt-faced, they cock and bull their way through these photographs, even when bruised and battered (Bloody Nose, Ice Pack, both 1998); there is something brutish brut·ish adj. 1. Of or characteristic of a brute. 2. Crude in feeling or manner. 3. Sensual; carnal. 4. about the leering leer intr.v. leered, leer·ing, leers To look with a sidelong glance, indicative especially of sexual desire or sly and malicious intent. n. A desirous, sly, or knowing look. boy in Blow-up, 1999, with his cavernous nostrils, big teeth, and heavy eyebrows. For all that, maybe he's a little cute. Occasionally a boy looks sweet, as in Player, 1999, which features a seemingly introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr black teenager against a dim landscape, but we find him again in Tennis Court, 1998, staring into the camera, fiercely competitive. These boys, flushed and dazed with the exhilaration of nature and sport and their own bodies, could be actors in some conservative propaganda campaign. The monumental, Aryan-looking track teamster TEAMSTER. One who drives horses in a wagon for the purpose of carrying goods for hire he is liable as a common carrier. Story, Bailm. Sec. 496. in Trifekta (Ice, Ice Baby), 1998, flaunts his beefy beefy, beefyness 1. in dog conformation, used to describe overdevelopment of musculature in the hindquarters. 2. in cattle, used to designate the desirable physical conformation of a beef animal, but an undesirable character in dairy cattle. blondness, underlined by his "Vikings" uniform. But Schorr's formal style is closer to that of the deadpan Kodachrome snapshot, which ironically particularizes its subjects, describing rather than aestheticizing. We fluctuate between seeing these boys through the adoring eyes of local teenage girls (as glorious) and as they appear to Chelsea gallerygoers (as other). The movie Schorr produced for the show, Tremolo tremolo (trem´ n an irregular and exaggerated speech pattern that may be the symptom of an emotional disturbance or of various Americana, 1998, stands apart from the photos. Its complex allure opens it up to different genders and preferences, drawing the film closer to Schorr's past work. Set to a Hendrix sound track, it captures the sexy, rapturous rap·tur·ous adj. Filled with great joy or rapture; ecstatic. rap tur·ous·ly adv. meeting of a soldier and his girl. The camera caresses the outline of the soldier, the curve of his ear, the fine and downy down·y adj. down·i·er, down·i·est 1. Made of or covered with down. 2. a. Resembling down: downy white clouds. b. Quietly soothing; soft. Adj. hairs of his nape--places that entice without reference to secondary sexual characteristics. Schorr is great with necks. Then we hit the uniform lapel and the medal pinned to its breast, and we are into gendered territory, which the film celebrates as well--the tie, the metal buckle on the web belt, the brush-cut hair. The specificity of gender signs dashes with the humanness of skin. We suspect that these are actors, then that they are both women; this ambiguity both emphasizes the performance aspect of the experience and invites a broader "us" into the image. The guitar music electrifies the lovers' swirling embrace. And even the music goes both ways: As the film repeats, two mixes alternate between funky and rock renditions of Hendrix, introducing a duality of black/ white to go with that of boy/girl. No Jenny-come-lately to the suddenly fashionable topic of masculinity, Schorr confidently pins these boys to mats and frames and walls. But in staging her own version of their heterosexual essence, she proves distortion to be more compelling than reality. --Katy Siegel |
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tur·ous·ly adv.
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