About the Book
Likewise for Joel Seah, ATROCITIES is also about witnessing and creating. Applying a queer lens to the Disasters of War as a cultural artifact, Seah has re-imagined and re-written the representation of suffering described by Goya — with a collection of horrors constantly articulated by his circle of gay friends.
In contextualizing Goya's masterpiece for today, ATROCITIES investigates how systems of visual representation and systems of language established by past histories can still accommodate imposed meanings or surface social ideologies for contemporary intervals and proposed futures.
Goya’s figures have been literally removed from their etched grounds, then hand-cut and colored. The figures are next staged and photographed in urban vignettes.
On a fundamental level, ATROCITIES conceptually follows arcs of visibility and invisibility in queer history.
As each figure shifts in scale and moves from plane to space, the various strategies of assimilation for queer identities in cultural landscapes are iterated.
However, regardless of sexual orientation, ATROCITIES hopes to engage the viewer with a persuasive critical dialogue that encourages reflection on any identity and its proximity to a content that has been (re)presented.
About the Creator
Formally trained as a printmaker, Joel Seah received his Master of Fine Arts from Syracuse University and his Bachelor of Fine Arts from The University of Alabama at Birmingham. Until he relocated permanently to Royal Oak | Michigan this year to become the primary healthcare provider for his boyfriend, Seah maintained a tenure-track position in the Department of Art & Art History at the University of Southern Maine | Portland, where he was named as the Outstanding Emerging Teacher | Scholar for 2008. Upon his resignation, Seah started GreenBambooStudios - a graphic design business exploring ventures in commercial visual communication - as a means to support a now independently funded fine arts studio practice. In spite of having exhibited both internationally and nationally, as well as holding numerous visiting artist and artist-in-residence positions, Seah’s proudest accomplishment to date has been holding on to the same boyfriend for the past five years and counting.