TY - JOUR A1 - Briand, Michel ED - Bièvre-Perrin, Fabien ED - Carlà-Uhink, Filippo ED - Rollinger, Christian ED - Walde, Christine T1 - Le Laocoon en icône queer et camp BT - Enjeux esthétiques, culturels, politiques JF - thersites 13: Antiquipop – Chefs d’œuvres revisités N2 - The Laocoön group, a famous source of inspiration for modern artists and a crucial masterpiece for historians of art and philosophers, is also a popular figure in queer contemporary art and culture, both distorted and celebrated through camp performative devices. After remarks about 1. “queer gaze” and the complex relation of queer or LGBTQIA+ culture and politics to the dialectics of kitsch/camp and classical / contemporary / pop art, and 2. (not straight but) queer classics, using “anachronisme raisonné” (Loraux”) and “écart” (Dupont), this article focuses on case studies from the 2010’s: 1. The untold gay history of Vatican guided tour; the music video Falling, by the “queer cowboy” Drew Beckman. 2. Paintings by Richard Wallace (esp. Laocoön); photographic series of Danil Golovkin (Modern Heroes : Photographing Bodybuilders in the Digital Age), 3. Julien Servy (Collages : Photo vs. Statues) ; the design firm modern8 (for the 2017 Utah Pride Festival). 4. The indigenous Canadian artist Kent Monkman, who, in paintings (The Academy), performances, installations, altogether stages and questions the violence of historical and cultural colonization and its impact on issues of gender and identity, and promotes dynamic interactions of aesthetics and politics, as well of pathos and camp. KW - anachronism KW - camp KW - classical reception KW - gay KW - Danil Golovkin KW - Laocoon KW - Kent Monkman KW - queer KW - Richard Wallace Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.34679/thersites.vol13.133 SN - 2364-7612 VL - 2021 IS - 13 SP - 1 EP - 42 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Jouteur, Isabelle ED - Bièvre-Perrin, Fabien ED - Carlà-Uhink, Filippo ED - Rollinger, Christian ED - Walde, Christine T1 - Laocoon Relooké JF - thersites 13: Antiquipop – Chefs d’œuvres revisités N2 - This article focuses on the reception of the ancient statue of Laocoon in the arts and popular culture of the 21st century. It looks into why this icon has remained continuously present in the public’s collective imagination and covers, in particular, the recapturing of this motif by four contemporary painters : Richard Wallace (2002), Ron Milewicz (2005), Gilles Chambon (2008), Kent Monkman (2008). The article examines as well the new meanings associated with its treatment and finally explores the way our contemporary world deals with the notion of monument and the concept of academicism. KW - Laocoon KW - contemporary art KW - academicism KW - painting KW - 21st century Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.34679/thersites.vol13.136 SN - 2364-7612 VL - 2021 IS - 13 SP - 43 EP - 70 ER -