Butches on bus shelters
PHOTOGRAPHY / SD Holman's project showcases women out of the mainstream
Erin Flegg / Vancouver / Thursday, March 14, 2013
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Most artists work to get their art into the galleries, but SD Holman is currently taking hers as far from that world as possible. The photo-based artist will have a show opening at The Cultch next month, but before the pictures make it to the gallery walls, they will adorn bus shelters throughout the city. 
 
The project, a series of 81 look-you-in-the-eye portraits, is titled Butch: Not Like the Other Girls, and when Holman approached the city about putting 20 of the images in bus shelters, officials jumped at the idea.
 
While Holman has a strong following in the queer community, for this project she says she’s more concerned about reaching an audience that isn’t typically exposed to images of queer identities, and that means getting them out into the world.
With Butch: Not Like the Other Girls, SD Holman wants to reach an audience that isn't usually exposed to images of queer identities.
(SD Holman)
 
She wants to show straight society, in particular, that women exist outside the culture’s narrow definition of what it means to be female.
 
“We’re so maligned in society, women who are masculine, who look like men. I was never considered hot until I came out as a butch. I was this ugly, fat girl,” Holman says. 
 
The aim of the project is twofold. First, Holman wants the photos to serve as a mirror to people who are often left out of mainstream ideas about gender.
 
“We have so few things in the world that say, ‘Oh, there I am.’ Because we look at magazines, we look at everything in the world and think, that’s not me.” 
(SD Holman photo)
 
The second part of Holman’s goal is to push beyond simple representation into celebration.
 
“I’ve had people come into my sessions feeling, ‘I’m not butch enough’ and feeling all in, and they came out feeling really good about themselves, and that’s what I want,” she says. “I want them to be sexy. They’re sexy pictures.”
 
The series has been a long time in the making; it was begun four years ago when Holman’s wife, Catherine, was still alive. Holman says Catherine was the world’s biggest fan of butches. When she died three years ago, Holman says, the project fell apart. But with some encouragement from a friend, she decided to finish it.
 
“I’m continuing for Catherine, and Catherine’s name and memory, and that’s what I had in mind when I was shooting butches.” 
 
Holman has yet to add a self-portrait to the collection of photographs, something she does with every project. She does it to situate herself as one of her subjects, rather than as an objective observer.
 
“I don’t believe in the objective. We always bring something to it. We bring whatever our preconceived notions are. I don’t believe in the perfect moment. I believe we’re a bunch of messy, imperfect moments.” 


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Reader Comments


 
Love you Butch
Congratulations SD Holman. We´ll see you soon... ;)
Terry Costa, Mirateca Azores
03/29/13 5:28 AM EST
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What's the big deal?
What's the big deal? In 2013, straight people in Vancouver can see butch lesbians on a near-daily basis. There's no need for taxpayer money to be used to put these photos in bus shelters. If a business wants to put an ad in a bus shelter, they have to pay for it out of their own money.
Ken, Vancouver BC
03/29/13 4:57 PM EST
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@KEN
Then I don't want to see ANY advertising paid by taxes with any human beings in them, if that's the way you want it, then this is the way I want it. No more humans in taxpayer-funded advertising please. I can see regular, straight folks all the time on a "near daily basis" right Ken? Thanks.
marc, VAN BC
03/29/13 5:44 PM EST
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@marc
Sounds good to me. I'd rather keep the tax dollars in my pocket. :)
Ken, Vancouver BC
03/29/13 5:52 PM EST
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love it!!!
s.d. ~ more!!! more!!! straight boyz ~ don't be girlish i mean churlish
kaye johnson, jacksonville,or usalove it!!!
03/31/13 12:32 PM EST
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seeing these make me so happy
Those who don't understand why someone would bother doing something like this, are obviously used to seeing people who resemble them in media. Seeing the installments on bus stops have made me so happy. I was never considered attractive before coming out as butch, just an ugly woman that men will not want. The public need to see more images of diverse gender expressions. Works such as this, which shows butch women in positive lights, will hopefully help those not accustomed to butch expressions to see the attractiveness in butch women. Just as I am queer yet the media and taught me to recognize male beauty.
dora, vancouver bc
04/17/13 1:53 AM EST
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