BDSM RTV MEDIA NEWS!!!!
31 oct 2010
Nicholas Sistler Raids Kinsey's Porn Stash for "Hotel Suite".
XXX FACTOR: Vintage erotica offers a local artist a wealth of inspiration
Source: www.chicagomag.com - Chicago Magazine - USA
USA- CHICAGO- To hear the Chicago artist Nicholas Sistler talk about his latest series of prints-a work five years in the making-youd think he was recounting a visit with a porn collector. I had certain ideas of things I thought Id be interested in before I got there, primarily the extremes of sexual behavior: fetish things, bestiality, sadomasochism, bondage-discipline, transvestism, says Sistler, sitting in his Bucktown home studio.
In a way, he was visiting a porn collection-Dr. Alfred Kinseys. Kinsey founded what is now the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction at Indiana University in 1947. The Bloomington facility maintains one of the worlds largest collections of vintage erotic photographs, many of which Kinsey, a onetime zoologist, acquired himself. (He died in 1956.) Its not widely known that the archives are open to researchers, including artists, and that 48,000 photographs, mostly taken between the 1870s and the 1970s, are cataloged there in the documentary collection. You mark a list of 44 categories-from analinctus, heterosexual to zoophilia-and aides bring you boxes to sift through.
Ive always been drawn to expressionistic stuff, visually and existentially-noirish visual elements, with shadows and a light source, says Sistler, 56, a Hyde Park native and School of the Art Institute grad. Since the mid-1990s, he has drawn praise for his miniature paintings, which show exquisitely detailed room interiors from skewed head-on-the-floor angles. In recent years, he has painted in scenes from film noir and other preexisting photo images. The results are pictures within pictures that question ideas about art, truth, and fiction.
At Kinsey, Sistler narrowed down some 4,000 black-and-white photos to 180, then 29, which he digitally incorporated into 15 prints. How could he legally use the images? It was produced as the pornography of the day, says Catherine Johnson-Roehr, a Kinsey Institute curator. Theres no way to trace who owns copyright because no one wanted to put a name on it. Its a little bit of a gray area.
Sistler worked with Anchor Graphics for a year to create the photopolymer intaglio prints, a time-intensive process that resulted in uncommonly crisp images. He hired a book conservator to create ten boxes for the complete set-now called Hotel Suite-and invested $25,000 in the project. So far, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Block Museum of Art have each purchased a boxed set, which retails for $8,000. Its nasty, some of it, says Mark Pascale, the Art Institutes curator of prints and drawings. But the museums board, which reviews all acquisitions, didnt have a problem. You look at Renaissance art, theres just as much profanity there, Pascale says. Kinsey was certainly interested in the things that Caravaggio was.
Sistler isnt concerned about the exploitation factor. It touches on a really dark, lonely place-an internal place, he says. The spaces Im depicting are internal psychological spaces. To be brutally honest, theyre of my own interior. And they are dark and lonely.
GO: Hotel Suite shows October 22nd through November 27th at Printworks Gallery, 311 West Superior Street, Suite 105; 312-664-9407.
See more photo's:
Chicago Magazine.