Red Year Installation

Red Year Installation

Each year at the end of the year, we do a gallery exhibit of the year’s projects. Here is our red year exhibit, which we did at Femina Potens gallery in San Francisco. Click on the photos to see the full images.

End of Year Summary

End of Year Summary

A 10-minute stream-of-consciousness writing by Elizabeth Stephens

This year brought much happiness, the wedding, the art, the friends in New York. Everyone going out of their way to be gracious and supportive and fun.

This year brought sadness too. Annie’s diagnosis of breast cancer. Tears, tears, tears. Driving up highway one crying so much and telling myself that I had to be strong. Then crying more. The chemo sessions, the making art out of cancer, the making of more cancer art. The performance piece in Scotland. So satisfying and fun. And we’ve made a really great piece. Now just more venues. More venues are coming.

A new friendship with Neon. Then poor Neon’s mother died. So suddenly. Becka is sick. Diane Bonder is Dying. Kitty had melanoma. We’re all dying come to think of it. Linda Montano out to visit. the Sea and Sand. Her performance(s) Loved it. Loved them. Much good-time spent with my sister Anne on her visit out to San Francisco. Very much enjoyed every minute of the two and a half week visit. It went by so quickly.

And even though I sometimes complain about walking the dogs, getting the dog (s) to walk was a wonderful thing to do. Bob keeps us going outside, into the sun and air and the beautiful California Landscape. As the year ends I am so grateful for my love Annie, my family, my dog and my own health right now. And of course there is always the work. As I look forward to the coming year, I think of the things I didn’t quite get right this year. I want to make more art, show it sell it. I want to spend more time with the people I love. I hope to loose some more weight and get really fit. I hope to work on my spiritual self and my emotional self.

So as this year ends I feel happy and satisfied in this moment. The candles are burning and we’re warm and well fed. We have each other and enough to pay our bills, Who needs more?

For the red year, I survived and am secure enough to move ahead into the orange year.

A 10-minute stream-of-consciousness writing by Annie Sprinkle

Beth has been great security when I needed to survive. We’re committed so she can’t escape! Breast cancer ballet adventure --8 months of busy-ness. Beth’s love lubricates me through it. My boob hurts tonight, with radiation burns. But love burns bright, with aloe vera kisses. Glad we’re going on to sex and creativity year. Can’t wait to get married again. Survival is key to life! The Love Art Lab project makes any suffering worthwhile and productive. Recycle suffering/pain/burns/chemo/illness. It’s healthy to be happy while suffering and surviving. It was a serious year, not my usual playful year. We made the best of it. Right boob is centerpiece. Energy is the key to all. Lack of energy is the lock. Death knocked, and we rocked.

Red year had many dogs. The New Year is most welcome. Red is dead. Red was fire. Red was red scars, red blood cells, red carpets rolled up. Who am I now? Next! Gray hair showing. First shampoo in six months. Our relationship survived, our collaboration flourished. I’m grateful for this 7-year piece, so life is art and love is art and art is healing and fruitful. Doing our two-woman show was highlight of the year. Doing performance art theater, circling love with Beth and audience, all trying to survive together. Thrive together.

Love is great security, along with health insurance. Breast cancer ballet; hang up those toe shoes from my girlhood. Be cool. Survive. Money. Where is money? Whores have money. Surviving show business. Go forward, don’t look back. Security blanket, cuddles, Bob, friends, family, home, Om, yoga, acupuncture, health on tight rope walk. New worlds open. Red is over. We did it. We survived red, we survived cancer, we survived chemo, we survived my low libido, we survived my lower (free lance artist) income. We survived it all, and phoenix will rise from my breast with skin breaking down. Tomorrow we dance.

So as this year ends I feel happy and satisfied in this moment. The candles are burning and we’re warm and well fed. We have each other and enough to pay our bills, Who needs more?

For the red year, I survived and am secure enough to move ahead into the orange year.

Bronze Panty Collection

Bronze Panty Collection

Pornstar/Academic Collection

Stephens gathered the pairs of panties from various well-known porn stars and academics and bronzed them using the ancient lost wax process. She then juxtaposed them together, with the name identifying the original wearers.

Porn stars and academics are both in the forefront of thought and practice around issues such as sexuality and identity politics. In the academic world the brightest intellectuals are fetishized in a manner that bears certain similarities to the ways in which porn fans adore their stars. Both are sexy, powerful and compelling. Included are the bronzed panties of Vanessa Del Rio, Ron Jeremy, Kate Bornstein, Carla Freccero, Ph.D., and Erica Rand, Ph.D..

This work is homage and a wink to the bravery and chutzpah of porn stars and adventurous academics, be it in the classroom or on the silver screen and who have changed the ways others see the world.

Formula Of Desire

Formula of Desire is a collaboration between Erica Rand and the Love Art Laboratory.

She's my type; they've got chemistry; gf seeks sm; roses, candlelight, lingerie. A butch 8 = 6 + a tool belt or a femme top = a tranny 5. Formulas of desire are mathematical and liquid. In there and out there. Hardwire and feather boa. Luscious products. Sexual economy. Bronze my panties and I'll fill your vitrines.

Post Porn Love -Theater Performance

Post Porn Love -Theater Performance

What happens when former porn star, sexologist and performance artist Annie Sprinkle falls madly in love with experimental artist, professor and sexy dyke playboy Elizabeth Stephens? We create a theater/performance art show about our relationship exploring artificial insemination, breast cancer treatments, queer weddings, art experiments, aging, sexuality and more. As a response to the war, anti-gay marriage sentiment and the politics of breast cancer, we invite everyone to a genuine celebration and critical public exploration of the deepest realms of romantic, sexual and familial love to bring about positive social change.

Breast Cancer Project

Breast Cancer Project

Surgery Performance

Annie was diagnosed with breast cancer on April Fools Day, just three months into the Red Year. We decided to take on the breast cancer as a Love Art Lab project. What better way to explore the themes of security and survival than to try and stay alive. Beth asked our anesthesiologist to document the highlights of the surgery performance for us. Here are the results. Annie’s nipple and tumor turned blue from the dye the surgeon injected into her lymph nodes. The biopsy came back indicating the lymph nodes were clear, and the cancer was stage one. Our surgeon told us the following week that the guys in the operating room were fighting over the papers used to blot the iodine off of Annie’s breast. Annie was making tit prints even while under anesthesia. Then we made 13" x 17" prints of these photos which were exhibited in an art gallery with surgical tape covering the frames.

Chemo Fashion Show

We went to chemotherapy infusions together every two weeks for four months. Beth brought her camera and the nurse assistant took a few snapshots. Everyone became part of the art making process. This delighted and entertained the other ladies getting chemo, as well as the medical staff. Later we organized the photos into a slide show performance which present like we are emceeing a fashion show.

Hairotica

When Annie began to lose her long Leo mane and pubes after nineteen days of chemotherapy, we decided to make the best of it. Photographer David Steinberg photographed us making scissorly love while cutting off Annie's hair and shaving her head bald. Then Beth had Annie shave her head in solidarity. The resulting photographs were published in On Our Backs magazine, and we coined a new genre of photography, "cancer erotica." Our motto is to 'eroticise everything!'

Bald Love

The thought of Annie losing her hair in the bath or on a pillow was more than what we wanted to experience. So we decided to finish the job that we had started in Hairotica at home. One beautiful day we shaved each other’s heads. Love is being bald together.

Love Infusion Center

The Love Art Lab always likes to raise money for a good cause. So when the Bernal Heights Community Center asked its neighbors to hold garage sales to raise money as a benefit, we rolled up our sleeves.

Inspired by the chemotherapy infusion room at our doctor's office, we created the Love Infusion Center in our garage. For a donation, garage sale shoppers/neighbors could sit on a red couch and get a "love infusion." Artist Tina Takemoto assisted as "Nurse Ana Phylaxis."

Patients were handed a clipboard with a questionnaire. "Describe your last love infusion. List your love allergies. What part of your body needs love the most?" The Infusion team then lovingly taped a clear plastic tube attached to red liquid in a bag to the part of their body they said needed love. "Patients" could relax on the couch for as long as desired. We infused over 50 people and several pets. We raised over one hundred dollars and the "patients" appeared noticeably refreshed and well loved after their treatment.

Extreme Kiss

Extreme Kiss

Installation

Extreme Kiss Installation, in the Digital Love exhibit at the M'ARS Centre of Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia.

This project is one of our Kiss Works series. A grid of nine monitors play three different angles (close-up, head and shoulders, and overhead) of us kissing for the length of a one hour video tape. We are both bald.

Extreme Kiss Performance, San Francisco

We kiss very intensely and passionately in public space, at a gallery or museum opening, for three or four hours without stopping, and without going further than the kiss. People can watch us or not.

Seen here is a kiss performed on Thursday, May 19th, 2005 during the opening night of the art exhibit, Private vs. Public (curated by Tina Butcher) at Artists' Television Access Gallery in San Francisco.

Music By Andrew Mckenzie of Hafler Trio

Cuddle

Cuddle

A double bed was installed in the middle of the Femina Potens Gallery as part of the exhibition I Do. It was covered with a red "security blanket." Once a week, during the exhibition we would put on cuddle outfits and spend several hours cuddling gallery visitors who had made advance appointments. This piece has subsequently been performed at the Center for Contemporary Art in Glasgow, Highways Performance Space in Santa Monica, California, the Center for Sex and Culture, San Francisco, and the Vortex Theater in Austin, Texas. At each of these venues we invited the participants to take off thier shoes and socks and cuddle between us for seven minutes. Sometimes the person wanted to talk or spoon or play footsies. Sometimes the person simply wanted to be held in silence. Once we did Cuddle at a sexy fundraising event, and Cuddle proved to be the most popular of the evening's entertainment choices, surpassing the lap dances, spanking booths and peep shows.

Red Wedding Video and Photos

Red Wedding Video and Photos

Red Wedding Homily

Red Wedding Homily

On Security and Love

For Annie & Beth by Geoffrey Hendricks*

Homily for their Red Wedding Saturday, December 18, 2004

In this “Brave New World” where so called Homeland Security is trying to rule the country through instilling fear and insecurity among the population; where claims of bringing peace and democracy are pretexts for starting wars, imposing fascism and setting up puppet governments; where a senator who will remain nameless says that the greatest threat to our security today is gay marriage; it is interesting to reflect on what security really is.

The dictionary states that the word “secure” derives from the Latin securus (safe, secure) which is from se (without) and cura (care), and it says more at IDIOT (akin to sed, se (without) sui (of oneself) and CURE cura (to cure the soul from care). With out care. Care free. Spiritual charge: care.Other words connected to “secure” are: trustworthy, dependable, assured, certain, to make fast, hold fast. Lasting possession or control of, to bring about (effect), to tie up. Berth, (the ship in the harbor).

Annie, Beth, your ship is in the harbor. What we are gathered here for is to reflect on the security that comes through love. It is about a fearless movement through life that is born from the love and trust that emerges from your union. The 19th century mystic Gurdjieff speaks of the energy of the “Third Force.” For example, when water meets a dam, electricity is generated. You, Beth and Annie, have come together and are generating a third force greater than the two parts. This is the nature of the security that emerges from love.

*Flux-Priest