AI-AP | DART » Natalie Frank: Story of O (2024)

Natalie Frank's first museum show, in 2015, presented drawings based on the unexpurgated Brothers Grimms fairy tales as translated by the scholar Jack Zipes. In a series of bold, expressionisticgouache and pastel drawings, she explored subjects present in the original writings including incest, rape, physical violence and othertaboo themes that have been suppressed since the Victorian era.

More recently Frank has turned for source material to what is arguably the most controversial novel of the 20thcentury: Story of O, published in 1954 under the pseudonym Pauline Reage, later revealed to be a prominent literary figure in Paris named Dominique Aury. “Upon reading O, Frenchphilosopher Albert Camus announced that a woman could not have written it: Women, he said, did not posses such erotic imaginations—nor were they capable of such immorality,” writes Frankin the introduction to the catalogue that accompanies the exhibition that opened Wednesday at Half Gallery.

For Frank, a committed feminist whose work continuously undermines stereotypes, thismust have been the bait that caught her imagination. Aury, Frank says, “wrote it for herself to show that this is what she and women can do. Women can seduce through means other than withsex—which is the great humor about this book—superficially it revolves around sex, but it was written to flaunt the much more powerful eroticism—of the mind.”

AI-AP | DART » Natalie Frank: Story of O (2)In the gritty and luminous gouache and pastel drawings on view at HalfGallery, Frank engages the intersection of body and mind, reality and fantasy, choices and boundaries explored in the novel. In Frank's signature image of O being taken by her lover into anS&M cult at a chateau outside Paris [left], the heroine is shown disheveled and frightened as she embarks upon a metaphoric journey from which she ultimately won’t return. The novel'splainly written but heated narrative suffuses this dual portrait of a woman in thrall to her older lover, seen here transformed into the shadowy yet domineering figure who would henceforth order herlife.

The drawings are tightly framed, roiling with activity and lurid atmosphere. Dense with jarring color and bizarre secondary figures that include a confused-looking canine bystander andan acrobatic monkey, they portray a claustrophobic world of curiosity and desire. Drawn through close observation of her model for O, and the depths of her imagination for the rest, Frank's seriesdoes not require a full understanding of the novel to be appreciated. But the catalogue that accompanies the show includes a publication history and synopsis of O that will reward the reader,together with all of the drawings, beautifully reproduced.

In a Q&A with Lawrence Weschler in the catalogue, Frank says, “SusanSontag wrote about the differences between art and p*rnography, using O as an instance of one and not the other. O develops as a woman, she has an interior life, she feels more and more alive.The sex and violence in the book are a means for her ‘ascent through degradation,’ as Sontag explains—this was such a revolutionary little book because it was the first erotic bookwritten by a woman about sex, violence, and women’s interior lives and their transformative desires. It also essentially explored a spectrum of relationships that challenged conventional norms.And it Is such a send-up of p*rnography because ultimately O develops intellectually, which doesn’t occur in p*rnography.”

AI-AP | DART » Natalie Frank: Story of O (3)Natalie Frank | Story of O continues at Half Gallery through June16th. 43 East 78th Street, NY, NY Info More about Natalie Frank here

Thereis a curious backstory to this exhibition, which I quote from the catalogue: Story of O was banned upon publication. Dominique Aury herself might have been intrigued that the original galleryvenue for this exhibition declined to show these drawings [Ed note: in the wake of the MeToo Movement’s escalation last fall] because of the power of this text and the images it hasinspired. I stand by all individuals who have spoken out, and I will continue painting and drawing about the interstices of sexuality and power.—Natalie Frank

More alongsimilar lines:

Sade: Artists Under the Influence, through June 29 at UBU Gallery, 416 East 59th Street, NY, NY InfoThe influence of the Marquis de Sade (Donatien Alphonse François de Sade, 2 June 1740 – 2 December 1814) is keenly perceived and felt in the works of the Surrealists, who sought toliberate and give expression to the mysterious and aggressive drives lurking within the unconscious mind. Surrealist artists, such as Hans Bellmer and Man Ray, made use of ideas, themes, and scenariosbased on Sade’s writings, attempting to emulate Sade by giving free rein of expression to all manner of psychopathological impulses and wanton paraphilia, including rape, murder, sodomy,coprophilia, and blasphemy.

More in a different but related vein:

Mistaken Identities | Images of Gender and Transformation: Vince Aletti & Brian Wallis inDialogue, Saturday, May 19, 2 pm. The Walther Collection Project Space, 526 West 26th Street, Suite 718, NY, NY RSVP: 212-352-0683 or email contact@walthercollection.com

Vince Aletti and Brian Wallis discuss archives of vernacular portrait photography concerned with gender identityand self-presentation in relation toMistaken Identities: Images of Gender and Transformation, the second exhibition in a multi-year series entitled "Imagining Everyday Life: Aspects ofVernacular Photography" at The Walther Collection.

Vince Alettiis a critic and curator based in New York. He was the art editor and photography critic at theVillageVoicefrom 1990 until 2005, when he began writing weekly exhibition reviews forThe New Yorker. He contributes a column on photo books toPhotographmagazine andwrites regularly forApertureandArtforum. Photographs from his collection of male images have been collected inMale,Rodeo,andUntitled/Anonymous.

Brian Wallisis Curator for the Walther Collection, New York / Neu-Ulm, and was formerly Deputy Director and Chief Curator at theInternational Center of Photography, New York. He has written and edited numerous books, includingThe Order of Things(2015),Weegee: Murder is My Business(2012),andMiroslav Tichy(2010). He is currently organizing a series of exhibitions focused on vernacular photography

AI-AP | DART » Natalie Frank: Story of O (2024)

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