James Franco, who turned 38 today (April 19, 2016), recently sat down with art critic Jerry Saltz to discuss his place in the art world.Β Saltz hasnβt been the biggest fan of the actorβs art, calling his 2014 show at the Pace Gallery βsilly self-obsessed demi-drag re-creationsβ and that βat this point George W. Bush is actually a better artist than James Franco.β
In the interview for New York magazine, Saltz said βIf Iβm to be honest, my second self is also real,” referring to a past interview when Franco said he was gay in his art, but straight in his life. “So if you said, ‘Iβm gay in my work,’ I guess that must mean that youβre also gay. If Iβm an asshole in my work, Iβm also an asshole. A lot of gay men have said to me, well, Francoβs kind of a gay cock tease.β
Related:Β James Franco Reveals Heβs Gay to a Point
βYeah,β Franco responded. βThere is a bit of over focusing on my sexuality, both by the straight press and the gay press, and so the first question is why do they care? Well, because Iβm a celebrity, so I guess they care who Iβm having sex with. But if your definition of gay and straight is who I sleep with, then I guess you could say Iβm a gay cock tease. Itβs where my allegiance lies, where my sensibilities lie, how I define myself. Yeah, Iβm a little gay, and thereβs a gay James.β
The gay media has been up and down about Francoβs genuineness, too. However, the popular opinion is positive. The gay community is happy someone of his stature is producing queer films (we need more of them). But in many ways, the βgay experienceβ as told through his films arenβt particularly accurate for most. In many ways, he fetishizes the genre.
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While heβs played many queerΒ roles (many of which he didn’tΒ direct), much of what he says about the gay experience areΒ told through anΒ outsiderβs perspective rather than from a man who lives it. I’m sure we’d feel a lot better if he said “Yes I’m bisexual, and here is my experiences about it.”
His obsession with gay culture seems to be the root of his art, at least in film. Many gay guys donβt know how to handle his storytelling: do we look away, or should we tilt our head and say, ββ¦ thank you? It’sΒ evident in films like Wild Horses, I am Michael, Milk, Howl, Sal, Interior. Leather Bar, and now King Cobra that heβs working for anΒ official gay card.
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But who he is as a person says nothing about what heβs doing for queer cinema. Iβm always going to be pro-Franco, but I admit it is a little touchy when someone says heβs a βlittle bit gayβ as if weβre a flavor of the month. Clearly that little bit of βgayβ is an idea, a prototype, rather than truth, which is the stem of art.Β What do you think?
David Artavia is an actor and writer from New York City. He loves living vicariously through his friends.Β FollowΒ him on TwitterΒ andΒ Like his Facebook page.Β