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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Art > Suggestive Portraits of Queer Monks and Nuns Spark Fury in Mexico
Suggestive Portraits of Queer Monks and Nuns Spark Fury in Mexico
Art

Suggestive Portraits of Queer Monks and Nuns Spark Fury in Mexico

Last updated: February 21, 2025 12:43 am
Editorial Board Published February 21, 2025
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A Mexico Metropolis exhibition of work portraying sexualized and queer Christian monks and nuns has elicited fervent complaints from spiritual teams and right-wing figures who’ve held protests on the museum for over per week.

Artist Fabián Cháirez’s exhibition La venida del Señor (The approaching of the Lord) opened on February 5 on the Academia de San Carlos Centro Historico, a constructing affiliated with the Nationwide Autonomous College of Mexico (UNAM) in Mexico Metropolis. In line with the artist’s observe of entwining sexual range and subversions of conventional gender roles in retellings of Mexican historical past and Christianity, the sequence of 9 work relationship from 2018 to 2023 present consecrated men and women in suggestive poses.

“It’s an exercise in which I make a comparison between religious ecstasy and sexual ecstasy, two things that would appear to be opposites but actually have more in common,” Cháirez instructed Hyperallergic in Spanish over WhatsApp.  

Some work function the nuns with their eyes shut in ecstasy, utilizing glasses of wine or folds in robes as allusions to digital penetration, whereas monks are depicted performing particular person or group fellatio on melting altar candles, kneeling on all fours to drink purple wine from a cup, and licking Jesus Christ’s nailed toes on the crucifix.

Exhibition view of Fabián Cháirez’s “Agnes Dei” (2023)

Incensed by the exhibition’s contents, the Mexican chapter of the Affiliation of Christian Attorneys (AAC) says it filed a authorized grievance towards Cháirez with the Nationwide Council to Forestall Discrimination (CONAPRED), a authorities company established in 2003 to advertise insurance policies for equality and resolve complaints of alleged discriminatory acts. As reported by Infobae, the AAC’s grievance was digitally signed by 9,000 individuals and claims that La venida del Señor “violates the right to freely profess one’s faith without being the object of attacks,” citing Article 24 of the Mexican Structure.

“There is a double standard from the public that feels offended,” Cháirez defined to Hyperallergic, including that lots of the complainants are “characters who self-define as ‘the new Mexican right-wing.’” Conservative figures such as Mexican Senator Lilly Téllez, Luis Felipe Calderón Zavala (son of former Mexican President Felipe Calderón), and “ultra-conservative” actor and far-right leader Eduardo Verástegui voiced their disdain for the exhibition online.

“I think there are other issues we should be protesting against, such as the church’s abuse of energy and sexual abuses throughout the church,” the artist continued.

Past the AAC’s complaints, the exhibition has confronted a number of protests onsite from teams taking offense to Cháirez’s portrayals. On Valentine’s Day, February 14, Catholic protesters organized exterior the Academia de San Carlos with indicators that learn “Blasphemy is not art” and accused the artist of bringing about “Christianophobia” in Mexico.

One other intervention occurred contained in the gallery yesterday, February 19, when members of UNAM’s Catholic group entered the house and staged a symbolic closure of the present with warning tape, indicators, and t-shirts emblazoned with the phrase “No ofendas mi fe en nombre del arte” (“Don’t offend my faith in the name of art”). The motion was peaceable and the contributors left with out incident.

“As an artist and member of the LGBTQ community, the fact that the far right is making gains is quite uncomfortable,” Cháirez continued. “But it’s important that we reconsider our strategies to confront any violence that we might face, especially by seeking community and trying to connect with people in real life who might think differently from us and exist in other contexts — by sharing information so that others can understand difference, freedom of expression, freedom of artistic expression, and all freedoms.”

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Left: Attendees on the opening reception of La Venida del SeñorRight: In a latex luchador masks, Fabián Cháirez poses onsite between two work from the solo exhibition.

This isn’t the primary time Cháirez’s art work has drawn criticism, significantly for its LGBTQ+ content material or interpretations of the work as such. A 2019 exhibition dedicated to Mexican revolutionary chief Emiliano Zapata on the Museo del Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico Metropolis grew to become the location of a protest that escalated into violence between representatives of the nation’s farmworker unions and LGBTQ+ activists over the inclusion of the artist’s 2014 portrait of a nude Zapata with a pink sombrero and seated pin-up fashion on a horse. The museum saved the portray on view however eliminated it from the exhibition’s publicity marketing campaign and added a wall textual content expressing the Zapata household’s disagreement with Cháirez’s illustration.

Close to La venida del Señor, Cháirez mentioned that UNAM has taken some safety measures for guests and employees for the reason that starting of protests to keep away from further tensions with the general public, “but so far there are no indications that the show will be closed, and I think that’s a very positive stance on their part.”

Valentina Di Liscia contributed reporting and translation help.

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