Oat Montien’s exhibition Country Home Sheriff opened at JWD Art Space in Bangkok on 2nd May, and runs until 14th July. (Last year, Oat curated Shotbyly’s exhibition Boy x Therapy.) Country Home Sheriff both celebrates and questions the cowboy as a male role-model in Thai culture, examining its influence on both gay and straight ideas of masculinity. The imagery is influenced by the pioneering work of Tom of Finland, and Oat has been artist-in-residence at the Tom of Finland Foundation.
For Oat, this subject is deeply personal, as his late father styled himself as a cowboy, and was the landlord of the Country Home pub, from which the exhibition takes its name. When his father died, Oat inherited his cowboy accoutrements, which he wears in videos shot for the exhibition. This raises Freudian issues, hinted at in the stunning triptych video installation The Exquisite Fall (อัสดง), which is the exhibition’s centrepiece.
In another video piece—Oasis (โอเอซิส), from his Desert Lasso series (บ่วงบาศก์ทะเลทราย)—Oat stars as a gay cowboy having a tryst with his lover in the middle of the desert. Oat is one of a select few Thai artists to have produced such sexually explicit videos, the others being Vichai Imsuksom (The Secret Room), Ohm Phanphiroj (The Meaning of It All), and Thunska Pansittivorakul (numerous examples, most notably Avalon/แดนศักดิ์สิทธิ์).
What these works of queer video art have in common, apart from their transgressive content, is their participatory nature: in each case, the artist appears on camera to perform with their partner. Oat’s appearance is even more performative, as he is playing a character (the cowboy), though it’s also more multi-layered, as he is wearing his late father’s clothing, and both personifying and subverting an archetype of masculine identity.
For Oat, this subject is deeply personal, as his late father styled himself as a cowboy, and was the landlord of the Country Home pub, from which the exhibition takes its name. When his father died, Oat inherited his cowboy accoutrements, which he wears in videos shot for the exhibition. This raises Freudian issues, hinted at in the stunning triptych video installation The Exquisite Fall (อัสดง), which is the exhibition’s centrepiece.
In another video piece—Oasis (โอเอซิส), from his Desert Lasso series (บ่วงบาศก์ทะเลทราย)—Oat stars as a gay cowboy having a tryst with his lover in the middle of the desert. Oat is one of a select few Thai artists to have produced such sexually explicit videos, the others being Vichai Imsuksom (The Secret Room), Ohm Phanphiroj (The Meaning of It All), and Thunska Pansittivorakul (numerous examples, most notably Avalon/แดนศักดิ์สิทธิ์).
What these works of queer video art have in common, apart from their transgressive content, is their participatory nature: in each case, the artist appears on camera to perform with their partner. Oat’s appearance is even more performative, as he is playing a character (the cowboy), though it’s also more multi-layered, as he is wearing his late father’s clothing, and both personifying and subverting an archetype of masculine identity.