Three way

Date
Artists
Callan Grecia
Phillip Steele
Brett Seiler
For more Info, contact us on: gallery@kznsagallery.co.za
Three way is a group exhibition of young artists Callan Grecia, Phillip Steele and Brett Seiler whom explore notions of queerness in, sometimes, very direct and other times veiled ways. All three artists present a personal relationship with the notion of queerness. The term is contested, both celebrated and hated – even in the contemporary, thus it continues to hold various meanings for the individual. In Three way their work is examined through the queer lens as each artist uses historical references while remaining rooted in the current moment and some idea of the future.
Originally describing something strange or unusual, the word queer took on a new meaning in the early 1900s when it started to be used as a form of insult towards men and women who engaged in homosexual relationships and to those who exhibited non-normative gender expressions. In recent years, social movements have reclaimed the word as a self-identifier for non-heterosexuals. Queer is now generally used to describe people across the LGBTQ+ spectrum. Academically the word queer is also used to describe those who practice unconventional sex (e.g. bondage, etc.), therefore heterosexuals too can sometimes be defined as queer (Urban Dictionary, 2020 ).
Grecia, Steele and Seiler explore notions of queerness to both question and highlight historical movements and moments with a particular emphasis on sexuality and the LGBTQ+ community. All three artists work with the human figure in relation to text, to conjure up feelings of queerness or the concealment thereof in the viewer. Working with a wide scope of media, from paintings to film, sculpture and installation, the artists engage in experimental modes of working, exploring ideas around quick application, gestural mark-making and surface. Grecia, Steele and Seiler use both colour and monochromatic elements in different ways to investigate the complexities and variedness of queerness in a local context.
Callan Grecia describes:
“The way I paint is still deeply rooted in a long white history of oil painting which is unfortunately a product of my also very long, very white academic training. At the same time, it is a continuous attempt at rejecting, subverting and generally taking the piss out of the parts that I find pretentious, superfluous, racist, etc. The images that inform my work are a distillation of my environment, which is then run through the filter of my own perception and unique experience of the world. Sometimes vice versa.”
Football, fashion, raves and other artists work finds its way into the paintings much in the same way as they occur on the internet, where any multiplicity is flattened into something cohesive and easily digestible via newsfeed or timeline. His use of bold colour, gestural mark marking juxtaposed with the use of hard line, exploration of the surface and the introduction of layers of mixed media talk to notions of “unusualness.”
Through these explorations Grecia conflates past, present and future in less obvious and more interesting ways.
While Phillip Steele’s work is more direct in its exploration of gay identity and the modes in which it is presented, viewed and owned; his use of colour, text and the human form speaks to that of Grecia’s. In his attempt to arrest exoticization, exploitation, denial of certain bodies, and stereotyping he uses the strong contrast of monochromatic elements alongside flat poster paint colours.
Steele states:
“The work recognises, elevates, and inserts untold narratives into the accepted Western art canon, ensuring a more inclusive, truer telling of the history of desire in art and culture.… My source material is 20th century gay “adult” and physical culture magazines. As much as these publications contributed to keeping homosexuality in the public realm, ironically, to still be published they had to practice self-censorship.”
Steele’s process allows him to control certain aspects of work – the flat use of colour to suggest poster painting and his use of text – can be seen as a metaphor for his attempt to control some of the ways in which his community is presented, perceived and exists. As he says this is his unapologetic gesture to the representation of acts of gay desire, lust and love.
Exploring complex themes such as love, loss and queer identity, Brett Seiler’s work dives into historic gay modes of communication and conduct. The use of mixed media, text, language and the human form being crucial to Seiler’s work is the thread that runs through all three artists work. Focusing on the sexual oppression of gay men Seiler’s monochromatic paintings, process works, and installations bring about feelings of longing and nostalgia.
Seiler explains:
“I think that is what is so romantic about found objects – because they hold stories and histories and when they eventually land in my studio, I try to re-purpose them which in itself is a sort of queerness, to give a new narrative of romantic gesture to discarded materials”
Often Seiler’s work is accompanied by interventions – bringing ‘queer’ into the gallery space through writings and imagery directly onto the walls of the space – as a revolt or disobedience.
Queerness is proudly represented in this exhibition of three diverse artists.
Curated by Kim Kandan and Jo Voysey.
View 3D online tour.
View available work here.
BREAKFAST AT THE COURTYARD
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R5 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 1
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 2
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 3
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 4
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 5
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 6
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 7
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 8
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 9
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
CONSOLATION PRIZE 10
CHARCOAL ON BRISTOL
2020
R3 500
dancing in a gay bar
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R4 500
DATE NIGHT
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R4 000
Hold
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R15 000
How Many Homosexuals Does it Take
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R4 500
I can pray with one hand
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R15 000
I Will Never Love You More Than Jerking Off In The Shower
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R5 000
Be Long To Me
Acrylic, Sumi Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2019
R15 000
Dudes
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Erotic Hands
Acrylic, Sumi Ink, and pencil on
2019
R15 000
Flick Trick
Acrylic, Sumi Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2019
R15 000
Hard to Handle
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Hung & Handsome
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Mandate
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Mr. Groovy
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Sex Machine
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Suck
Acrylic, Sumi Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2019
R15 000
The Cruiser
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Uranus
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Weekend Lockup
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
Wheatpaste Flag
Ink on 272 sheets of
2020
R0
Wild Boys
Acrylic, Indian Ink, and pencil on 380 gsm 100% cotton fine weave triple primed canvas
2020
R5 000
PRICK
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
RAT AND PARROT
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R4 000
SAD SAUL STEINBERG
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
Some days I love my friends
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R30 000
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
Stephan
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R40 000
THE MASKS PEOPLE WEAR
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R4 000
the rainbow will always be above us
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R7 500
This Is Not A Straight Painting
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R3 000
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
U SHOULD LISTEN TO MY PODCAST BRO
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
YOUR LUCKY DAY
ACRYLIC ON FABRIANO
2020
R5 500
A group of pay men is called a choir
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R2 500
A list of drag queen names
Bitumen and roof paint on canvas
2020
R9 000
AFTER PACIFIC NO GUN
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R2 500
SELF PORTRAIT IN BOOTLEG CAMIEL FORTGENS AND WAPI-SABI FOR PEACE TEE
ACRYLIC ON BRISTOL
2020
R4 000