Being isolated at home can lead us not only to cherish our limited surroundings but to view them through different eyes. The lobster-shaped vintage cake mold on your wall may suddenly resemble a penis; a Sufjan Stevens song you never noticed before may become your new jam. This decelerated pace allows us to enjoy previously overlooked pleasures, including those residing in our bodies. And given our new abundance of time, sex, in all its forms, is ours to revel in.
Needless to say, art has always flirted with sex, from Bernini’s Ecstasy of Saint Teresa to Tracey Emin’s Everyone I Have Ever Slept With. There’s no shortage of opportunities for stimulation while social distancing, online or off, and art offers limitless doses of love, kink, romance and sex. It allows us to tune in to ways its creators challenge taboos and use the power of sex to provoke.
Below, we share a collection of contemporary artworks to turn you on. They depict sex, but they also manifest our right to love, to fuck—to exist.
Loie Hollowell
Direct Shot

*Direct Shot*, 2018,
oil paint, acrylic medium, sawdust and high-density foam on linen mounted on panel.
© Loie Hollowell. Courtesy Pace Gallery.
Doron Langberg
Zach and Craig

*Zach and Craig*, 2019,
oil on linen. © Doron Langberg. Courtesy Yossi Milo Gallery, New York.
Zanele Muholi
Being

*Being*,
2007,
silver gelatin print color print on aluminum.
Gift of the artist. Courtesy Leslie-Lohman Museum.
Torbjørn Rødland
Red Pump

*Red Pump*, 2014,
chromogenic print,
Edition of 3 with 1 AP. Courtesy David Kordansky Gallery.
Hayv Kahraman
Not Quite Human 1

Barbara Hammer
Multiple Orgasms

*Multiple Orgasms* (still),
1976, 16mm film transferred to digital video.
Courtesy Barbara Hammer.
Brendan Fernandes
Ballet Kink

Courtesy the artist, the
Guggenheim Museum, New York,
and Monique Meloche Gallery,
Chicago, Photo credit Scott Rudd
Events.
Paul Mpagi Sepuya
Dark Room Mirror (0X5A0752)

*Dark Room Mirror (0X5A0752)*,
2019,
archival pigment print.
Courtesy the artist, Team Gallery, New York and Modern Art, London.
Nicole Eisenman
Is It So
