Zackary Drucker | |
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Born | 1983 (age 40–41) Syracuse, New York, U.S. |
Education | |
Known for | Performance art, television production, photography, film |
Website | zackarydrucker |
Zackary Drucker (born 1983) is an American multimedia artist, cultural producer, LGBT activist, actress, and television producer. She is an Emmy-nominated producer for the docu-series This Is Me, a consultant on the TV series Transparent, and is based out of Los Angeles. Drucker is an artist whose work explores themes of gender and sexuality and critiques predominant two-dimensional representations. [1] Drucker has stated that she considers discovering, telling, and preserving trans history to be not only an artistic opportunity but a political responsibility. [2] Drucker's work has been exhibited in galleries, museums, and film festivals including but not limited to the 2014 Whitney Biennial, MoMA PS1, Hammer Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, the Hammer Museum and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. [3]
Zackary Drucker was born in 1983 and raised in Syracuse, New York [4] by what she calls "two really fantastic, progressive, educated parents." Her paternal grandfather, Eugene Drucker, was an aeronautical engineering professor at Syracuse University who consulted on the Apollo space program. She earned an M.F.A. from the California Institute of the Arts in 2007 and a B.F.A. from the School of Visual Arts in 2005. [5] In 2006, Drucker made her first television appearance as a contestant on Jeffrey Deitch's Artstar .
After graduating from CalArts in 2007, Drucker decided to stay in Los Angeles. [6] Photographs from her graduate thesis show, "5 East 73rd Street", feature photographs of mentor Flawless Sabrina. That same year, her work was included in a group exhibition called Girly Show: Pin-ups, Zines & the So-Called Third Wave at the Wignall Museum of Contemporary Art at Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga. [7]
Drucker did not have role models growing up, but her parents were progressive and supported her gender nonconformity. [8] In high school, Drucker aligned herself with Kate Bornstein's books about ways of living that do not ascribe to traditional gender conventions.
Drucker is a trans woman.
When Drucker met Rhys Ernst, Drucker had recently graduated from the School of Visual Arts and was on the TV show "Artstar". Drucker had never dated a man before and Ernst had never dated a woman. In 2014, Drucker and Ernst had a show at the Whitney Museum of American Art which captured them in day-to-day relatable scenarios like celebrating anniversaries, staying in, or relaxing by the pool. [8] The former couple published the photographs of them together, which the New York Times stated was an important public record for transgender life. [9] Although the couple is no longer together, Drucker and Ernst want to show that transgender people can live ordinary lives, filled with love. [9] In a 2014 magazine, Drucker stated that she hopes that one day we can surpass the binaries of gender entirely. [8]
Drucker chose to keep the first name Zackary after transitioning despite it being a traditionally masculine name. Drucker explained her choice by saying "I considered changing my name and when I realized that I didn’t want to, that I’d only be doing it to make everyone around me more comfortable, I decided that it was the epitome of a bad decision. Gandhi said, 'Be the change you wish to see in the world,' and the world I decided to live in is one in which a woman is named 'Zackary.'" [10]
In 2011, Drucker and photographer Amos Mac collaborated on a series take in Drucker's hometown of Syracuse, titled "Home is Where the Heart is, Distance is Where You Hang Your Heart." This series was also published in "TransLady Fanzine". [11]
Drucker and collaborator Rhys Ernst were included in the first iteration of the Hammer/LAX Art biennial. [12] There they premiered the film "She Gone Rogue" and the film was also included in Outfest 2013. [13] "She Gone Rogue" includes several of Drucker's mentors including Holly Woodlawn, Vaginal Davis, and Flawless Sabrina. [14]
In 2014, Drucker and Ernst exhibited "Relationship", at the Whitney Biennial. This series of photos chronicled one couple's relationship and gender transitions. [15] [16] The photographic series was later exhibited at Luis De Jesus Gallery, where Drucker is represented. [17] In 2016, "Relationship" was released as a book. [18]
Since 2013, Drucker had worked as a consultant and producer on Amazon's original series Transparent. [19] Media scholar Nicole Morse argues that Drucker's use of double casting in Transparent brings to light transfeminine history from the 1930s to 1994. [20] For this role, Drucker was also involved with writing, hiring, casting, producing, providing notes on script, offering feedback, and postproduction. [20] According to the New York Times Magazine, Drucker's and Ernst's goal for Transparent is to ensure that trans people are depicted authentically on screen and that they are also working behind the scenes. Drucker mostly contributed to the plot, script, wardrobe, and casting of episode 8, "Best New Girl" from Season 1. In this episode, Drucker believed it was crucial to capture the historical tension between those who identified as male cross-dressers and those who transition. In Season 2, Drucker was involved with shaping the historical context and casting. [21]
In 2015, Drucker joined the cast of the E! docu-series, I Am Cait [18] and also served as a supervising producer on the Emmy-nominated series of docu-short entitled This is Me. [22]
In 2017, Drucker collaborated with the ACLU, Laverne Cox, Molly Crabapple, and Kim Boekbinder, for a video entitled history and "Time Marches Forward & So Do We". [23]
In 2021, Drucker directed and executive produced alongside Nick Cammilleri, The Lady and the Dale , a HBO documentary series profiling Liz Carmichael, a trans woman who had perpetuated an ambitious con involving a 3-wheeled car. [24]
Drucker continues her art practice and works on independent film and photography projects. Drucker focuses work on obscure aspects of the history of transgender people. [2] In an interview with The Creative Independent Drucker mentioned, "I feel an acute sense of responsibility, of service, to the trans and gender non-conforming communities, and I think that all of us have to use our platforms to create more empathy and understanding in the world." [25]
Her work challenges the way we perceive gender, sexuality, and perception. [26] [ tone ]
Year | Film and video art | Role | Type | Citation |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Fish | Actress | [30] | |
2008 | You Will Never Be a Woman | collaboration with Van Barnes, Mariah Garnett, and A.L. Steiner [35] | ||
2009 | P.I.G. | Actress | multimedia performance and film | collaboration with Rhys Ernst. [27] |
2010 | Lost Lake | Actress | short film | collaboration with Van Barnes |
2011 | At Least You Know You Exist | Director | short film | [29] |
2012 | She Gone Rogue | Actress, Writer & Producer | short film | [28] |
2015 | Southern For Pussy | Director, Writer & Actress | short film | [36] |
2017 | Time Marches Forward & So Do We | short documentary video | [23] | |
2020 | Disclosure: Trans Lives on Screen | Herself | documentary film | [37] |
2022 | Framing Agnes | Agnes | documentary film | |
2022 | Biosphere | Producer | feature film | |
2023 | Queenmaker: The Making of an It Girl | Director | Hulu documentary |
Year | Television | Role | Citation |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Artstar | Herself | [38] |
2014–2016 | Transparent | Producer, Actress/Herself | [39] |
2015 | This is me (documentary) | Producer, Actress/Herself | [40] |
2015–2016 | I am Cait | Actress/Herself | [41] |
2021 | The Lady and the Dale | Director; executive producer | [42] |
Year | Title | Role | Location | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | Bring Your Own Body: the Story of Lynn Harris | Artist | Cooper Union, New York City, New York | A multimedia performance featuring paint, sculpture, textiles, film, digital collage, and performance. [43] |
Artstar is an unscripted reality television series set in the New York City art world, considered to be the first in the visual arts. Selected from an open call of over 400 applicants, eight artists participate in a group exhibition at Deitch Projects with the opportunity for a solo exhibition as well. The program documents the selected artists as they interact with leading critics, curators, collectors, and artists in New York, while making new works as part of the collaborative exhibition.
Every Ocean Hughes, formerly known as Emily Roysdon, is a multimedia interdisciplinary artist based in New York and Stockholm. They also work as a writer and currently hold the position of Professor of Art at Konstfack in Stockholm, Sweden. Hughes employs various mediums such as performance, photography, printmaking, text, and video. Hughes curates and collaborates to express their artistic vision.
Transparent is an American comedy-drama television series created by Joey Soloway for Amazon Studios that debuted on February 6, 2014. The story revolves around a Los Angeles family, the Pfeffermans, and their lives after learning that their parent is a trans woman now going by the name Maura. Transparent tells the story of Maura's coming out, as well as her family's personal journeys in discovering their own identities and coming to terms with Maura's identity. Transparent moves away from a solely transition-centred narrative and represents Maura's story in her role as a trans parent, grandparent, professor, partner, ex-spouse, sibling, and as an older person transitioning. Transparent also includes other queer representation in the Pfefferman family. Sarah explores her sexuality and works through relationship dilemmas throughout season one while Ali explores their gender and sexuality. Transparent's first season premiered in full on September 26, 2014, and its second season on December 11, 2015, third season on September 23, 2016, and fourth season on September 21, 2017.
A. L. Steiner is an American multimedia artist, author and educator, based in Brooklyn, New York. Her solo and collaborative art projects use constructions of photography, video, installation, collage, and performance. Steiner's art incorporates queer and eco-feminist elements. She is a collective member of the musical group Chicks on Speed; and, along with Nicole Eisenman, is a co-curator/co-founder of Ridykeulous, a curatorial project that encourages the exhibitions of queer and feminist art.
Wu Tsang 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 MacArthur "genius" grant.
Luisa Lambri is an Italian artist working with photography and film, based in Milan. Her photographs are often based on architecture and abstraction.
Flawless Sabrina, also known as Mother Flawless Sabrina, was an American LGBT activist, drag queen, performer, and actress, based in New York City. Flawless Sabrina was a pioneer for transgender people and drag queens not only in the mainstream, heterosexual society, but within the gay society as well, where transgender people remained heavily stigmatized. Sabrina lived in New York near Central Park from the 1960s until her death.
Suzie Silver is an American artist based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, whose artistic focus lies primarily in queer video and performance art. Silver received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute in of Chicago in 1988 and her undergraduate degree from the University of California in 1984 and is currently a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in the School of Art.
Alok Vaid-Menon is an American writer, performance artist, and media personality. Vaid-Menon is gender non-conforming and transfeminine, and uses the singular they third person pronouns.
Tuesday Smillie is an American interdisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Her work focuses on trans-feminist politics and the aesthetics of protest.
Adam is a 2019 American comedy-drama film directed by Rhys Ernst, from a screenplay by Ariel Schrag, based upon the novel of the same name by Schrag. It stars Nicholas Alexander, Bobbi Menuez, Leo Sheng, Chloe Levine, and Margaret Qualley.
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Rhys Ernst is an American film producer and director. A trans man, his work explores transgender identity. He is best known for his work on transgender-related television shows, serving as an associate producer on Transparent and the director of its documentary spin-off This is Me. He is also known for his controversial debut feature film Adam.
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