Kalup Linzy: Romo Gallery.
Auslander, Philip
So, anyway, rich and hunky Harry proposes to Taiwan ... you know,
Taiwan, the gay African-American lip-synch performance artist? And poor
Taiwan doesn't know what to do. He loves Harry, but he's not
sure he can commit. He's not sure what his family will think, what
his church will think. He talks to his sister on the phone, he calls a
psychic, he calls his mother, who calls her mother.... He just
can't decide!
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
These are the days of our lives. Actually, this is one day in the
life of Taiwan, a character that artist Kalup Linzy portrays on video
and in live performance. In Conversations wit de Churen III: Da Young
and Da Mess, 2005, an episode in an ongoing video soap opera, Taiwan
must choose between his lover and the life to which he is accustomed.
Linzy tackles the ripped-from-the-headlines topic of same-sex marriage with humor and pathos. The video is no polemic--it takes the idea of two
men marrying for granted and goes on to ask whether these two men should
marry. At this stage, the signs are unfavorable: Taiwan seems unlikely
to surrender the security of his family and church to be with Harry.
Although Conversations includes many of the tropes of downtown
performance--over-the-top stereotypes, pop-culture references, drag,
insouciantly bad acting, and tacky production values--it is affecting as
well as campy. As much as television soap opera, it evokes the plays
performed for primarily African-American audiences on the so-called
chitlin circuit. The audiences for these plays, which typically feature
broadly portrayed character types and melodramatic plots that often
center on faith and temptation, value their familiarity. Linzy
implicitly asks of his audience a similarly empathetic response, not
just ironic appreciation.
As in other of Linzy's video works, the action in this episode
takes the form of telephone conversations, in which Taiwan sounds out
various members of his family and avoids Harry. While the round-robin
phone calls may seem neurotic, they represent the support system that
sustains Taiwan emotionally: the phone lines are the ties that bind. In
this show, these ties were also represented graphically in four works on
paper. Part of a series titled "Whatchu Lookin' At,"
2006, each depicts a group of people gazing at something. In two cases,
we see what they are looking at (a couple kissing and a couple
fighting); in the other two works, we only see them looking. All of the
figures are rendered in black silhouette as bodiless, cartoonlike heads.
In two images, these are connected by rhizomatic tendrils, as if each
group of heads belongs to a single organism. With Linzy's
characteristically light touch, these drawings evoke the ways in which
our communities are the audiences for our social performances.
In another video, Lollypop, 2006, two shirtless men in floppy hats
lip-synch flawlessly to Hunter & Jenkins's 1933 recording of
"Lollypop," a comic vaudeville blues piece given over to
male-female flirtation couched in double-entendres. The result is
disarming and subtly layered, as Linzy filters an older, somewhat
declasse genre of African-American performance through a contemporary
queer sensibility. His use of lip-synching creates enough critical
distance to foreground the construction of gender and sexuality in both
the song and his own video, but the spareness of the presentation also
allows us simply to enjoy the music.