Publication: Queer art of parallaxed document: the visual discourse of docudrag in Kutlug Ataman's Never My Soul!
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The video art of Kutlu Ataman problematizes ethnography as method and documentary as genre. Ataman's subjects on screen construct themselves in front of the camera, via talk and self-performance, where the artist's strategically unmarked authority reveals a critical ambiguity in terms of agency, identity and identification. Self-aware of their global reach and critically attentive to the contemporary ethnographic turn in the visual arts scene, Ataman's video-works enact a conscientious failure in representation. Through the performative storytelling of Ceyhan Firat Hizal, a Turkish pre-op transsexual living in Switzerland, Kutlu Ataman's Never My Soul! (2001) translates to video-art practice the critical potentials of mockumentary and its pseudo-ontological relation to drag performativity. Queering genres of visual identification, Never My Soul! films and documents Ceyhan's self-performance in drag, where the drag act, autobiographical revelations, testimony and self-confession are intentionally supplemented by, and confused with, a strategically rewritten script of 'original' conversations. Oscillating between, and mocking, the generic truth claims of Yeilam melodrama, porn and confessional documentary realism, Ataman's video is a hybrid of multilayered artifice and excess. This essay treats Ataman's video Never My Soul! as a theoretical metafilmic object which simultaneously confronts the contemporary articulations of surface/depth in queer aesthetics and of the flattened indexicality in global art documentary
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Oxford University Press
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Film, Radio, Television
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Screen
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10.1093/screen/hjr020
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