DATES
- TUE 24 – SUN 29 September
Available On Demand
- TUE 24 – SUN 29 September
In my conversations with Jarra Karalinar Steel and Ciwas Tahos (林安琪 Anchi Lin) for BLEED 2024, I was struck by how both their works foreground romance, desire and community, using sensual and digital elements to imagine a sanctuary that is both transcendent and embodied.
That, of course, made me think of sex and the internet — maybe I am always thinking about sex and the internet — and especially of Lex, a text-first queer app that has grown over the last five years from a platform for personals ads (modelled on the back pages of old-school lesbian magazines) to a sort of community noticeboard or queer Twitter. It can be gossipy, claustrophobic and clout-chasing, as any small community can be, and the app is glitchy and uncomfortably commercialised, yet it’s also a digital sanctuary of sorts, especially as other platforms become more openly and violently anti-trans. I have spent a lot of time there and it’s fed me, surprised me, and prompted me to think more succinctly about who I am and what I want, absorbing the economical jargon of vintage personals ads (“ISO” means “in search of”) as well as the contemporary sociolect of overly-online queers. So I have elected to write my responses to love.exe and Finding Pathways to Temahahoi in the style of Lex posts – 300-character bursts of desire, intention and invitation, in the IRL and URL.
- Commissioned and presented by Arts House as part of BLEED 2024.
BLEED (Biennial Live Event in the Everyday Digital) was conceived by Campbelltown City Council through Campbelltown Arts Centre, and The City of Melbourne through Arts House. BLEED 2024 is produced and presented by Campbelltown Arts Centre, Arts House, and Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts in partnership with Treasure Hill Artist Village.