• Home
  • Archive
  • Random
  • Mobile
  • Feed
  • Ask
  • Submit

me Slave to the Rhythm

following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following following
Thematticus theme by Anthagio.
A tribute page for those of us whose lives cannot exist without the sheer brilliance of Miss Grace Jones' incredible fashion, music and iconography.
I do not own the majority of the pictures I post, I am merely a slave to the rhythm.
Please let me know what you would like to see more/less of.
This site is cared for by williams-blood.
Posts tagged history.

"Interestingly, Jones, a Jamaican born artist, was actively working in the Parisian fashion world as a model at the time she moved into performance art. Her involvement and popularity in the Parisian fashion world as a spectacle, being a model, may be compared with the likes of Josephine Baker and Saarjite Baartman before her, black females whose bodies became the locus of the Parisian imagination.

Jones’ bold and often confrontational dress and performance style played with and disrupted primitivist myths about black sexuality. In collaboration with artists like Jean-Paul Goude and Keith Haring, Jones transformed her body into medley characters, many of which satirized a primitivist reading of the black female body. The multiple personas of Grace Jones ranged widely from overly sexualized dance performances in which she donned a gorilla or tiger suit to very masculinized self-representations."

— Krista A. Thompson’s Post-Colonial Performance & Installation Art (via fuckyeahsheroes)

(via fuckyeahsheroes)

Tagged: Krista A. Thompson, quote, Grace Jones, history, .
english.emory.edu   19 ♥ 06.08.12

Grace Jones: A Jamaican in Paris

popthirdworld:

Interestingly, Grace Jones, a Jamaican born artist, was actively working in the Parisian fashion world as a model at the time she moved into performance art. Her involvement and popularity in the Parisian fashion world as a spectacle, being a model, may be compared with the likes of Josephine Baker and Saarjite Baartman before her, black females whose bodies became the locus of the Parisian imagination.

Jones’ bold and often confrontational dress and performance style played with and disrupted primitivist myths about black sexuality. In collaboration with artists like Jean-Paul Goude and Keith Haring, Jones transformed her body into medley characters, many of which satirized a primitivist reading of the black female body. The multiple personas of Grace Jones ranged widely from overly sexualized dance performances in which she donned a gorilla or tiger suit to very masculinized self- representations.

- Krista A Thompson

Tagged: Grace Jones, Krista A. Thompson, history, .
popthirdworld   22 ♥ 06.04.12