Boychild
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Tosh Basco, known by her performance name boychild (stylized in lowercase), is an American performance artist, dancer, and photographer. boychild identifies as nonbinary trans, but considered her persona of boychild to be female and uses she/her pronouns when performing. By inhabiting female pronouns whilst preforming while sustaining a nonbinary identity, boychild is "non-conformist to hegemonic ideas of sex and gender, boychild is positioned as subordinated other in more ways than one and the viability of her sex, gender, and humanness is called into question." boychild's performances relay how bodies have been thrown into arbitrary categoricalness that reiforces cisheteronortmative benefit from these classifications."She uses her body as a vehicle for performing. The "body has become a form of political subject and considered a heart of power" The body is the physical embodiment of "the self", which "can be used as a tool to reveal the ubiquitous wholeness of being—dissolving difference." Her choreography, she told Interview Magazine, is like "the physical body turning into a cyborg ... It’s like a glitch; there’s a repetitive thing that happens." Performances of boychild's often consist of lip-syncs to heavily distorted pop songs. Her signature style includes a shaved head, full-body makeup, tinted contact lenses, and neon lighting. She lives and works predominately in California and Hong Kong.


Work

boychild was born in Sacramento, California and grew up in San Francisco during the 1990s. She experimented with drag at an early age and cites Dia Dear as an early influence. boychild began performing with her persona in 2012 in the San Francisco drag scene. San Francisco is home to the first "gay riot" that broke out in August 1966 when drag queens dining at Compton's Cafeteria on Turk Street fought back against police harassment. This riot proceeded the Stonewall Rebellion in New York City that would take place three years later. Moreover, boychild states that she is not exactly a drag queen, but her persona offers truth to the notion that "trans drag performers expand the possibilities of drag altogether". boychild states that the birth of the Boychild persona occurred during months of research into clowns, healers, and non-western cultures, medicine men, shamans, witches. boychild says "by research into ‘shamans and the role they played as the healer, knower, medicineman, jester. I found in various cultures … a person who used knowledge, cunning, humour, and wisdom to heal; whether through medicine, psychic insight, comedic performances, rituals or a combination of all these things." Performances by boychild are sci-fi in aesthetic and nature. boychild uses posthuman performance strategies to communicate meaning through combinations of body, voice and technology. boychild's performances often reference idea of cyborgs, which plays with the hybrid of machine and organism and becomes a creature of social reality and fiction. They "inhabit a kind of queer flesh that vibrates out-with the humanly-accessible spectrum, as if you were suddenly able to see ultra-violet, or heat, in some sort of politicised cyborg becoming that overwhelms your senses." Some of her performances are one-time-only, providing this intense immersement in the performances while it is occurring. boychild emphasizes that working in nightlife scene is crucial because "nothing contextualizes yperformance the same way as these places do. It’s my world, my existence in the underground." Additionally, with their adolescence occurring post internet, they spent time finding things on there, reporting that the "underground exist on the internet." These physical spaces give space for "excitingly queer, non-binary corporeality of the protagonist(s)" that showcase new examples of identities who will inspire future generations that will inspire trans-inclusive feminist contributions to the art community. boychild walked in Hood By Air's 2013 spring/summer show with signature white-out contacts lenses and glowing mouthpieces alongside
A$AP Rocky Rakim Athelaston Mayers (born October 3, 1988), known professionally as ASAP Rocky ( ; stylized as A$AP Rocky), is an American rapper, music producer and record executive. Born and raised in Harlem, he embarked on his musical career as a membe ...
. Later that year, boychild toured with singer
Mykki Blanco Mykki Blanco (born April 2, 1986) is an American rapper, performance artist, poet and activist. She has collaborated musically with artists including Kanye West, Teyana Taylor, and Dev Hynes, Blood Orange. Early life Blanco was born in Orange ...
and began collaborating with multimedia polymath
Wu Tsang Wu Tsang (born 1982 in Worcester, Massachusetts) is a filmmaker, artist and performer based in New York and Berlin, whose work is concerned with hidden histories, marginalized narratives, and the act of performing itself. In 2018, Tsang received a ...
. boychild's collaboration with Wu Tsang has led to numerous performances, videos, and other projects, such as Moved by the Motion, which includes cellist
Patrick Belaga Patrick may refer to: *Patrick (given name), list of people and fictional characters with this name *Patrick (surname), list of people with this name People *Saint Patrick (c. 385–c. 461), Christian saint * Gilla Pátraic (died 1084), Patrick o ...
, dancer Josh Johnson, electronic musician Asma Maroof, and poet
Fred Moten Fred Moten (born 1962) is an American cultural theorist, poet, and scholar whose work explores critical theory, black studies, and performance studies. Moten is Professor of Performance Studies at New York University and Distinguished Professor ...
. boychild and Wu Tsang are longstanding collaborators. Wus Tsang, primarily a filmmaker, and boychild's, primarily a performer, work seem fit within the other's contour which has propagated their sustained work together and provide audience members opportunity to experience queerer worlds. Wu Tsang works to look at "the way fantasy plays in representing social movements. Evoking “the underground” as a site of cultural resistance, he considers how these constructs have been transformed by the internet and social media." The underground and the internet are two spaces where boychild first took on her performative identity. boychild's performances have been presented at the
Gropius Bau Martin-Gropius-Bau, commonly known as Gropius Bau, is an important exhibition building in Berlin, Germany. Originally a museum of applied arts, the building has been a listed historical monument since 1966. It is located at 7 Niederkirchnerstra ...
, the Venice Biennale, the
Sydney Biennial The Biennale of Sydney is an international festival of contemporary art, held every two years in Sydney, Australia. It is a large and well-attended contemporary visual arts event in the country. Alongside the Venice and São Paulo biennales a ...
, the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA PS1, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the
Stedelijk Museum The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (; Municipal Museum Amsterdam), colloquially known as the Stedelijk, is a museum for modern art, contemporary art, and design located in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
in Amsterdam,
ICA London The Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) is an artistic and cultural centre on The Mall in London, just off Trafalgar Square. Located within Nash House, part of Carlton House Terrace, near the Duke of York Steps and Admiralty Arch, the ICA ...
, and Berghain.


#Untitled Lip-Syncs

Many of boychild's performances are a part of her #''Untitled Lip-Sync'' series. #''Untitled Lip-Sync 2'' begins in complete darkness. Eventually, three red lights begin flashing to form a triangle shape that illuminates boychild's head. One light is held in boychild's mouth, while the other two are held in each of her hands. A spotlight shines on boychild, which reveals that she is tangled in ropes and has white paint on her face. The performance displays boychild struggling against the constraint of the ropes, symbolizing the struggle that occurs from acts of pain, hate, anger, and desire towards queer people. Many of boychild's lip-syncs use similar elements to those in #''Untitled Lip-Sync 2,'' like lights and paint, to accompany the movement and music in the performance.


References

{{reflist American performance artists Artists from San Francisco Living people Year of birth missing (living people)