My Recent Art = Your Fault (The Harry Potter Dirty Nipple Edition)

My rendition of Sirius Black recently caused waves of “titillation”…

Apparently my nipples alone can crash the whole damn system.

My body has been censored my entire life. Since age 7 I’ve been keenly aware of this weaponized female body of mine, and 33 years later I’m still being told to cover up, or else. My body is dangerous, inappropriate, not-masculine-enough-to-be-looked-upon-nude, yet too-feminine-to-be-left-in-peace-without-commentary. As FemBoyCreature my body is clearly meant to be made money off of — to shave, cover up, costume, and prettify in order to sell tickets, please. My actions against this mandate are absolutely battle strategy depicting dominant ownership of this body I like to think of as “mine”.

I don’t “play along” very well. My creative mind is disinterested in doing what’s appropriate over what I find to be playful and effective. I have more than once been erased from the historical record which social media keeps via photographs and video clips. I prefer to continue on my merry way followed by those who actually want to make meaningful change and understand that nothing ever shifted by pleasing the forces that be. Especially aesthetically, and especially concerning equality.

I performed twice this past week as Sirius Black from Harry Potter, in a HP themed show. My performance was a pretty traditional striptease. I transformed from Sirius, the man, into a dog by the end of the act — Sirius’s animagus form, Padfoot.

I didn’t wear pasties in my act.

This choice, apparently, broke someone.

This choice, apparently, made people wonder about whether the venue could lose its liquor license.

This choice, apparently, had some audience members uttering, “That’s awesome, soooo illegal, but AWESOME!”, under their breath while watching.

This choice, apparently, made such waves that for the four days between shows I couldn’t get a straight answer from my producers or anyone at the venue about whether I would be able to do my second show the same way. At the last minute before show call, I was made to submit an artistic statement about the choice to not wear pasties in order for there to be an unadulterated second performance. What male performer, may I ask, has been asked to do the same while performing topless in Cambridge, MA?

I hope my nipples can crash the whole damn system… I’d love to create my art as it occurs to me to make, and not deal with drama surrounding its presentation.

My Patrons are the people who helped me make this piece of art, and they are helping me create my next. For my next performance I’m playing “Anonymous”. It’s a benefit show fundraising for sex workers called “Herstory“,  and the theme of the show is artists playing historical Femme characters. My inspiration for this piece resonated in the well known words of Virginia Woolf, “For most of history, Anonymous was a woman.” So I shall perform my piece in honor of the unnamed women and minorities who have been my ladder in this lifetime.

My Patrons have been sent a video of my Sirius Black performance. If you would like to be a patron of my work and receive videos, backstage glimpses, and the occasional writing which I don’t publicly share, please visit my Patreon Campaign and contribute. I post up to 6 times a month, and you can cap your donation if you need to. Thank you for your consideration — and a huge thank you to those of you reading who are already a part of my artistic funding team!

This past month I made a mask, hand painted temporary tattoos, and whipped up costume pieces, I cut my wig, trimmed down some new lace facial hair, and spent a tiny fortune on all the little pieces that go into playing this character effectively on stage, I choreographed, filled out paperwork, and I showed up to my day-long tech rehearsal on time.

I’ve performed bare-ass naked on Oberon’s stage before, pastie-less a number of times, and created art which has brought up way more contentious issues than the female nipple. This was the artist statement I submitted in order to perform the second show sans pasties:

I was just now forwarded your letter to the producers of the Potter Prom asking for my thoughts on the pastie issue. I am sending you what I replied to them with. I had also forwarded an entire letter concerning this incident with this information on Monday, hoping you would receive it then. I hope this suffices, I do not wish to change my act tonight. Please reply directly to me if you can, I am on a bus on my way to Boston.

Thursday, June 21, 2018
Dear _____,

The following is cut and pasted from my letter to the venue which I sent on Monday:

The choice [not to wear pasties] is an artistic one. My performance in the Potter Prom is a gender bending and shapeshifting comment on the body. As a trans artist with breasts who frequently plays male characters, I was absolutely invoking the idea of the meaning of the naked breast and gender expectations; also from the perspective of a character who stands up for his rights, the rights of others, and who challenges the authorities and the laws he finds immoral.

It was never my intent to challenge [Venue] itself. My understanding of the venue was that because it had a theater license, the artistic choices held within a theatrical performance were allowed, nudity being a common form of free speech. If I was incorrect about this, I apologize, and ask that the venue let me know how it functions surrounding nudity so that I might not make the same mistake again.

I prefer not to wear pasties tonight. 

Please let me know directly if that is unacceptable.
~Creature/Karin Webb

Maybe I’m all out of fucks about my nipples being an issue in public… I’ve been fighting this fight forever, and I’m tired. I am the only artist in the cast not to have any publicity photos to share from our first night of performance — I don’t even know why, considering there were ample opportunities in my performance where my back was turned, my clothes were on, or I was posed in a manner which obscured my un-adorned breast points. If Cambridge, MA and artistic associates, in the year 2018, cannot figure out how to embrace the “whatever gendered nipple” on stage, I have very little hope for civilization at large.

Help me fund my art, and I will continue to challenge what mores I am able to simply by breathing and creating in the body I was born into.

After the second show a very excited audience member made their way up to me and shook my hand, while out tumbled the words, “Thank you so much! Thank you for putting my gender on stage! I never thought I’d see that, thank you!”. I replied, “Your welcome, it’s my gender too.”

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

Please support my work on Patreon, or for one time: Support the Artist or email me.
~Thank you.

Freedom

The bill, H.R. 1865, otherwise known as the “Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act”, or “FOSTA”,  passed the House last week even though it’s been deemed unconstitutional by the Department of Justice. This bill doesn’t do what it portends to, which is make it legal for prosecutors to go after internet companies who allow sex trafficking to be advertised on their websites. It’s already legal to prosecute sex trafficking and those who aid it. The current interest in FOSTA by our government officials is as a tool to indict Backpage on trafficking charges for allowing traffickers to advertise on their online service. This bill does a number of other things though, including threaten free speech on the internet, make it harder for smaller companies to grow and thrive, deny consensually working sex workers the safety of an open platform to find, vet, and negotiate with clients, and sends actual sex traffickers deeper into the underground where it will be harder for law enforcement to find them, much less prosecute.

By making internet companies liable for all content posted using their services (in a way which still makes it easy for large companies to deny knowing anything, and leaves smaller companies with limited resources high and dry), it forces internet companies to police consumers. This limits everyone’s freedom of speech and freedom of expression on the internet in the long run. Sex workers, sex trafficking survivors, free speech advocates, internet companies, even the Department of Justice, and a host of other groups have spoken out against this bill. Politicians are, as usual, happy to pass a badly written and poorly researched bill which looks good to uneducated constituents, all the while putting at risk the general public and harming sex workers who are disproportionately women, transpeople, frequently POC, and Queer. Surprised much?

A word on conflation: Do you know the difference between sex work and sex trafficking? An important thing to understand in our modern debate over freedom of one’s own body, is that there is a difference between sex trafficking and consensual commercial sex work. Sex trafficking is coerced sex work. Not all sex workers are coerced into their jobs. Many sex workers are happy with their chosen vocation.

Loosely defined a sex worker is a person employed by the sex industry. The sex industry is vast and includes strippers, professional dominants/submissives/switches, prostitutes, adult entertainment actors/producers/crew members/management, phone sex operators, web cam performers, sex surrogates, sexologists, and a host of other occupations. As you can see not all sex workers trade sexual contact for money. People who choose sex work come from and have a variety of backgrounds, fields of interest, levels of education, ethnicities, genders and sexes, relationship statuses, body types, and have varied personal and professional boundaries regarding what activities they will and will not engage in for pay. Every sex worker I know decides who they will take on as a client or employer, and what activities they are comfortable engaging in, with whom, under what circumstances, and when. Like any other industry there are even sex worker unions in some areas of the country which help SWs advocate for their needs on the job and help ensure their safety to a higher degree. Some people engage in sex work infrequently, informally, or for a short period of time in order to make ends meet (also known as “survival sex work”), and some sex workers view their job as a full time, long term occupation.

Sex trafficking (forced sex work, or sex slavery), is the term used to describe anyone who is forced to engage in sex work against their will, or who is coerced into it against their choice.

When law enforcement or the media talk about sex trafficking, they often conflate the issue with consensual sex work. They often go after, traumatize, and harm people who are making a living consensually and as safely as they are able to negotiating with clients in order to pay the bills.

Why does it matter that we make a distinction between sex workers and sex traffickers? The most immediate reason I can think of is safety. The safety of sex workers when consensually vetting, negotiating with, or working with a client is threatened when there is no discernment between what they are doing and what a victim of sex trafficking is being forced into doing. As sex workers are forced further and further underground under the guise of (due to a conflation with) “stop sex trafficking” measures, SWs lose access to a level of safety and protection which open air conversations provide. When everyone’s freedom of speech is restricted concerning sex work, and the places sex workers can be found are more and more remote or coded, a SW’s ability to reasonably vet clients, stand up to bosses who they feel are coercing them, report abuse/assault/rape, demand condom use, have access to meaningful healthcare, or any number of other wrongdoings becomes increasingly difficult to bring to light without the fear of retribution, being ignored, blamed, abused, or worse.

In study after study it has been shown that when sex work is decriminalized, STI rates drop as do rates of rape and domestic abuse in the general population. Decriminalization of consensual commercial sex work is not the same as decriminalization of sex trafficking. Everyone is better served by making these distinctions and going after the real bad guys. Bad guys who are frequently not women, trans people, queers, and POC (just sayin’). We need to demand more from our elected officials.

Play On My Friends,
~ Creature

Please support my work on Patreon. For one time donations click here: Support the Artist 
~Thank you.

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