Scientia Sexualis centers research-driven interventions into raced and gendered assumptions that structure scientific disciplines governing our sense of the sexual body. The artists in this exhibition bring attention to the material, conceptual, and psychic forms of the lab and the clinic as aesthetics that operate across scientific and artistic discourses. Together with the catalogue and related programming, Scientia Sexualis aims to examine and reconfigure the relationship between art and science and, in turn, to create an alternative access point to the history of science where sex, gender, and pleasure are concerned.
Scientia Sexualis takes its title from Michel Foucault’s landmark text, The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1 (1976), in which Foucault describes the nineteenth-century development of a “scientia sexualis”—the clinical pursuit of a “uniform truth of sex” as evidenced by an endless scanning of the body and a relentless cataloging of sexual types and deviations …
Scientia Sexualis centers research-driven interventions into raced and gendered assumptions that structure scientific disciplines governing our sense of the sexual body. The artists in this exhibition bring attention to the material, conceptual, and psychic forms of the lab and the clinic as aesthetics that operate across scientific and artistic discourses. Together with the catalogue and related programming, Scientia Sexualis aims to examine and reconfigure the relationship between art and science and, in turn, to create an alternative access point to the history of science where sex, gender, and pleasure are concerned.
Scientia Sexualis takes its title from Michel Foucault’s landmark text, The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1 (1976), in which Foucault describes the nineteenth-century development of a “scientia sexualis”—the clinical pursuit of a “uniform truth of sex” as evidenced by an endless scanning of the body and a relentless cataloging of sexual types and deviations. In contrast, over the past 35 years, feminist and queer artists have approached sex and gender as sources of experimentation, knowledge production, medical management, and biotechnical information, resulting in a wide range of works that address difficult subjects such as the origins of modern gynecology and its ties to the torture of enslaved women; the pathologizing of the sexual body; the entanglement of colonization with sexual violence; and the nonconsensual gendering of trans and intersex people. The artists featured in Scientia Sexualis not only explore these painful histories through their artistic output, but they also work from its wake, reclaiming and redeploying scientific discourses to produce speculative technologies of transformation, map embodied forms of knowledge, and radicalize practices of healing and care.
While several major museum exhibitions have addressed issues of gender, sexuality, and representation, Scientia Sexualis is distinct for the coalitional possibilities it generates between Black, feminist, trans and decolonial approaches to these subjects. The project is intentionally heterogenous, situating Black feminist work that confronts the abuse of Black women’s bodies alongside decolonial interrogations of a settler colonial anthropology, trans reclamation of medical practices, and intersectional feminist interventions in reproductive medicine. As a whole, the exhibition addresses the aftermath of our encounters with scientific discourses and institutions as the featured artists surface the contradictory energies that circulate through the lab and the clinic, the library and the archive, exploring and re-constructing frameworks that tell us not only what sex and gender are, but what a body is and can be.
Featured artists include: Panteha Abareshi, Dotty Attie, Louise Bourgeois, Nao Bustamante, Andrea Carlson, Demian DinéYazhi’, Nicole Eisenman, El Palomar, dean erdmann, Jes Fan, Nicki Green, Oliver Husain & Kerstin Schroedinger, Xandra Ibarra, KING COBRA (documented as Doreen Lynette Garner), Joseph Liatela, Candice Lin, Carlos Motta, Wangechi Mutu, Young Joon Kwak & Gala Porras-Kim, Cauleen Smith, P. Staff, Joey Terrill, Chris E. Vargas, Millie Wilson, and Geo Wyex.
Scientia Sexualis is organized by ICA LA guest curators Jennifer Doyle and Jeanne Vaccaro, with support from Amanda Sroka, Senior Curator, and Caroline Ellen Liou, former Curatorial Associate.
Lead funding for Scientia Sexualis is provided by the Getty Foundation. The exhibition is also generously funded by Angeles Art Fund, Vera R. Campbell Foundation, Karen Hillenburg, Kelsey Lee Offield and Cole Sternberg, Pasadena Art Alliance, and Laura Donnelley. Additional support provided by Ellen and Bill Taubman.
Major support for the publication and public programs is provided by the Terra Foundation for American Art and the University of California, Riverside.
ICA LA is supported by the Curator’s Council and Fieldwork Council.
Street Transvestites Action Revolutionaries font courtesy GenderFail. Eliza font courtesy Camelot Typeface.
Scientia Sexualis is among more than 70 exhibitions and programs presented as part of PST ART: Art & Science Collide, a landmark regional event exploring the intersections of art and science, both past and present. PST ART is presented by Getty. For more information, please visit pst.art.
Jennifer Doyle holds a Ph.D from Duke University and is Professor of English at University of California, Riverside. She is a queer theorist, art critic, and sportswriter whose research focuses on art, sport, artist engagement with medical history, and artist collaboration with laboratory sciences. She is the author of Shadow of My Shadow (Duke University Press, 2024); Sex Objects: Art and the Dialectics of Desire (University of Minnesota Press, 2006); Hold It Against Me: Difficulty and Emotion in Contemporary Art (Duke University Press, 2013); and Campus Sex/Campus Security (Semiotext(e), 2015). From 2015–2017, she curated a series of feminist performances for The Broad Museum, “Tip of Her Tongue.” She also organized Nao Bustamante: Soldadera for the Vincent Price Art Museum (2015) and I Feel Different (2009–10) for Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE). Doyle is a member of the Board of Directors for Human Resources Los Angeles. She is the recipient of an Arts Writers Grant and was the 2013–2014 Fulbright Distinguished Chair at the University of the Arts, London.
Jeanne Vaccaro is a scholar and curator whose writing and social practice trace the idiosyncrasies of the archive to activate liberation histories and coalitions. She holds a Ph.D in Performance Studies from New York University and is Assistant Professor of Transgender Studies and Museum Studies at the University of Kansas. She was a research fellow at the Kinsey Institute and inaugural scholar-curator at the ONE Archives. She curated Foucault on Acid, with paintings by Grace Rosario (2021), and nothing lower than I, with sculptures by Xandra Ibarra (2022). She also organized Bring Your Own Body: transgender between archives and aesthetics for Cooper Union (2015). Her scholarly writing is published in GLQ, the Journal of Modern Craft, Radical History Review, Social Text, TSQ, and Trap Door, and her forthcoming book Handmade: feelings and textures of transgender, was awarded the Arts Writers Grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation. She is co-founder of the NYC Trans Oral History Project, a community archive partnership with the New York Public Library.