Browsing items from "January, 2011"

Michael Patterson-Carver

In the course of my life and activism, I have learned a few things- including the fact that in order to succeed at anything the first step you must take is to BELIEVE.

Claude Cahun

Claude Cahun (1894 – 1954) was a French photographer and writer. Her work was both political and personal, and often played with the concepts of gender and sexuality.

Vertna Bradley

Born in Mexico, Missouri, Vertna Bradley grew up along the Mississippi River in Keokuk, Iowa. Her interest in expressing herself through film/books is a culmination of 20 years of working in, creating, and studying mass media as a copywriter, author, producer, videographer, filmmaker, editor, visual artist, professor, and two-time Accolade Award winner.

Ion Birch

Ion Birch lives and works in New York, NY. Educated at the Rhode Island School of Design, Birch is best known for his erotic graphite works on paper.

Larry Jens Anderson

Born in rural Kansas in the mid-twentieth century, Larry Jens Anderson’s work is saturated with the influence of his mid-western family.

Welcome

Sex Drive presents contemporary artworks that address sexuality across a panoply of forms. Using photography, drawing, painting, video, sculpture, and installation, 22 artists bring their own pleasures […]

About the Curator

Stuart Horodner currently resides in Atlanta, Georgia, where he is Artistic Director and Curator at the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center.

In The Mood

by Stuart Horodner Lingering glances and sweaty palms.  Unzipping your dress.  Taking your pants off.  You have your memories, I have mine.  And the participating artists have […]

Wrong Results: The Google Blacklist

by John Muse On September 8th, 2010, Google added “Instant Search” to its search engine: Start typing and results appear right before your eyes. Until now, you […]

Likes, Favorites, and Other Obscenities

by Ellen Freeman ’11 and Patrick Phelan ’11 Over the past decade, the words “like” and “favorite” have been annexed.  Although they are still used as signs […]