Zachari Logan was born in 1980 in Saskatoon (Canada) where he currently lives and works.
"My body is a catalyst for my fascination with stereotypic masculine portrayals. Utilizing historic themes of male bravado, heroism and narcissism I juxtapose the mundane realities of everyday contemporary life. The act of weightlifting, attaining a well-sculpted body is envisioned stereotypically as a visual mark of masculine enterprise, an act I partake in on a daily basis. Without needing to see me engaged in the act itself, my drawn body infers a performative athleticism. This athleticism coupled with the theatricality of a doppelganger or triplet existing on the same stage is designed to subtly evoke feelings of competition, fear and omnipotence- all in relation to performance anxiety. Although in most of these drawings I depict my body in a life-sized scale, the pictorial space in these drawings is quite shallow, with enough room for the figures to exist and interact. This lack of spatial depth is referential to Neo-Classical space, in which Spartan bodies were used to visually epitomize the strength of empire. The containment of space in these drawings is structured to illustrate a sense of claustrophobia and is directly referential to the viewer’s own body. This is a space that is in-between or marginal, a visual realm that is too small to exist within comfortably — but is considerable enough to contemplate being in."
Describe yourself in five words. Irreverent, Enjoyable, Intelligent, Sarcastic, Loyal…
What inspires you? I am inspired by history, aesthetics, a good story with fascinating characters. I am also often inspired by the mundane interactions in everyday life.
What is your belief about narcissism? All artists are narcissistic in a way, (and I don’t mean this negatively) we all create work which is about ourselves. Issues which affect us- I use myself as a mirror to engage viewers in a conversation about masculine stereotypes and queerness. The repetitive depiction of self in my work indicates an innate narcissism on the part of myself, the artist. A person auto-eroticizing his or her own image, seeing in him or herself that which is sexually appealing is an aspect of everyday life that I wanted to reveal in this series. In heterosexist society, the act of gazing at one’s self is stereotypically accepted behavior for women and homosexual men as it is considered to be an effeminate act. This type of conduct is often stereotyped to have serious homoerotic undertones. Auto-eroticization is so ubiquitous, particularly to most men, that they often rebuff doing it. Unapologetically employing the rhetoric of self-satisfaction within my work helps to de-stabilize heterocentric notions of queer relationship dynamics. While playing nicely into the stereotype that homosexual men and women substitute another person of the same sex in place of their own unattainable selves.
Why you have chosen to be the protagonist of all your paintings? Your must be full of self-confidence! Who says I’m always the protagonist?!… I am self confident- I think that is apparent, but I hope the themes in my work express more than just a simple case of solipsism on my part.
What made you start painting YOURSELF naked? For a long time I had been working on paintings and drawings which depicted men compiled from everyday sources such as internet porn, magazines and old photographs. These series were successful in my opinion, but I felt they were lacking a more subtle edge, one which I felt I have acquired through the use of my self as subject. Using only my own image has aided in the production of a more nuanced visual understanding of masculine portrayals. I have much more control over how I present my own image as opposed to images of men I do not know and have little or no psychological connection to. In developing a body of work that features me as the sole figurative element, I am able to locate myself in relation to my viewer. With this single source, I narrate embodied personal experiences about my life as a gay man, my relationship with my body and how others perceive it.
If you were born in another century which one would be and why? I’m not sure I’d want to be alive in a time without modern medicine… but I’d have to say either the 16th century, so I could meet Caravaggio my favourite artist… or the 19th century so I could meet Arthur Rimbaud and Oscar Wilde.
Of your own paintings for which one are you most proud of? Most proud of… I’m not sure- but my favourite painting at the moment is “In and Out #1”
In the BUTT magazine’s interview you say that you are married with a beautiful man called Ned. How does Ned react seeing his boyfriend naked in your paintings? I won’t lie we have certainly had a few long conversations about it- but Ned understands that these works are not about my sexual appetites, this work does not advertise my sexuality in an explicit way. These drawings and paintings are much less about my own preferences- they are about me in the world, about my body… but again not explicitly so.
Are you religious? More like irreligious… I think religion is an important and significant part of human history and culture- but people who are very religious (or fanatical) often scare me because the way they think about their prospective religion is usually inane and harmful to others.
You are going for a weekend “somewhere” and you have to invite 7 famous people, dead or alive. Where would you go and who would they be? Caravaggio, Oscar Wilde, Arthur Rimbaud, Queen Elizabeth I, Elton John, Tori Amos, Anne Boleyn and Virginia Wolfe..somewher in Lisbon (ok… I chose 8 people)
What’s your favourite movie? “The Shining” by Stanley Kubrick... hands down!
Are you afraid of the future? No.
Describe to me the perfect day? Reading a good book with coffee, followed by some studio time!
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Zachari Logan was born in 1980 in Saskatoon (Canada) where he currently lives and works.
"My body is a catalyst for my fascination with stereotypic masculine portrayals. Utilizing historic
themes of male bravado, heroism and narcissism I juxtapose the mundane realities of everyday
contemporary life. The act of weightlifting, attaining a well-sculpted body is envisioned stereotypically
as a visual mark of masculine enterprise, an act I partake in on a daily basis. Without needing to see
me engaged in the act itself, my drawn body infers a performative athleticism. This athleticism
coupled with the theatricality of a doppelganger or triplet existing on the same stage is designed to
subtly evoke feelings of competition, fear and omnipotence- all in relation to performance anxiety.
Although in most of these drawings I depict my body in a life-sized scale, the pictorial space in these
drawings is quite shallow, with enough room for the figures to exist and interact. This lack of spatial
depth is referential to Neo-Classical space, in which Spartan bodies were used to visually epitomize
the strength of empire. The containment of space in these drawings is structured to illustrate a sense
of claustrophobia and is directly referential to the viewer’s own body. This is a space that is
in-between or marginal, a visual realm that is too small to exist within comfortably
— but is considerable enough to contemplate being in."
- Zachari Logan
Zachari Logan's interview at Yatzer
Describe yourself in five words.
Irreverent, Enjoyable, Intelligent, Sarcastic, Loyal…
What inspires you?
I am inspired by history, aesthetics, a good story with fascinating characters. I am also often inspired by the mundane interactions in everyday life.
What is your belief about narcissism?
All artists are narcissistic in a way, (and I don’t mean this negatively) we all create work which is about ourselves. Issues which affect us- I use myself as a mirror to engage viewers in a conversation about masculine stereotypes and queerness. The repetitive depiction of self in my work indicates an innate narcissism on the part of myself, the artist. A person auto-eroticizing his or her own image, seeing in him or herself that which is sexually appealing is an aspect of everyday life that I wanted to reveal in this series. In heterosexist society, the act of gazing at one’s self is stereotypically accepted behavior for women and homosexual men as it is considered to be an effeminate act. This type of conduct is often stereotyped to have serious homoerotic undertones.
Auto-eroticization is so ubiquitous, particularly to most men, that they often rebuff doing it. Unapologetically employing the rhetoric of self-satisfaction within my work helps to de-stabilize heterocentric notions of queer relationship dynamics. While playing nicely into the stereotype that homosexual men and women substitute another person of the same sex in place of their own unattainable selves.
Why you have chosen to be the protagonist of all your paintings?
Your must be full of self-confidence! Who says I’m always the protagonist?!… I am self confident- I think that is apparent, but I hope the themes in my work express more than just a simple case of solipsism on my part.
What made you start painting YOURSELF naked?
For a long time I had been working on paintings and drawings which depicted men compiled from everyday sources such as internet porn, magazines and old photographs. These series were successful in my opinion, but I felt they were lacking a more subtle edge, one which I felt I have acquired through the use of my self as subject. Using only my own image has aided in the production of a more nuanced visual understanding of masculine portrayals. I have much more control over how I present my own image as opposed to images of men I do not know and have little or no psychological connection to. In developing a body of work that features me as the sole figurative element, I am able to locate myself in relation to my viewer. With this single source, I narrate embodied personal experiences about my life as a gay man, my relationship with my body and how others perceive it.
If you were born in another century which one would be and why?
I’m not sure I’d want to be alive in a time without modern medicine… but I’d have to say either the 16th century, so I could meet Caravaggio my favourite artist… or the 19th century so I could meet Arthur Rimbaud and Oscar Wilde.
Of your own paintings for which one are you most proud of?
Most proud of… I’m not sure- but my favourite painting at the moment is “In and Out #1”
In the BUTT magazine’s interview you say that you are married with a beautiful man called Ned. How does Ned react seeing his boyfriend naked in your paintings?
I won’t lie we have certainly had a few long conversations about it- but Ned understands that these works are not about my sexual appetites, this work does not advertise my sexuality in an explicit way. These drawings and paintings are much less about my own preferences- they are about me in the world, about my body… but again not explicitly so.
Are you religious?
More like irreligious… I think religion is an important and significant part of human history and culture- but people who are very religious (or fanatical) often scare me because the way they think about their prospective religion is usually inane and harmful to others.
You are going for a weekend “somewhere” and you have to invite 7 famous people, dead or alive. Where would you go and who would they be?
Caravaggio, Oscar Wilde, Arthur Rimbaud, Queen Elizabeth I, Elton John, Tori Amos, Anne Boleyn and Virginia Wolfe..somewher in Lisbon (ok… I chose 8 people)
What’s your favourite movie?
“The Shining” by Stanley Kubrick... hands down!
Are you afraid of the future?
No.
Describe to me the perfect day?
Reading a good book with coffee, followed by some studio time!
yatzer.com
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