Scott Treleaven is a Canadian artist whose work employs a variety of media including painting,
collage, film, video, drawing, photography and installation.[1]
Artwork
Critical writings have invoked references to
Jean Genet,
William S. Burroughs,
Jack Pierson and
Nan Goldin, in describing Treleaven's place in "a lineage of obdurate misfits".[2] He attended the
Etobicoke School of the Arts and
OCAD University. Treleaven has exhibited in a number of institutions throughout the world including Cooper Cole, Toronto; XYZ Collective, Tokyo; MOCA Tucson, Arizona; Invisible-Exports, New York; The Suburban, Milwaukee; 80WSE, New York; ICA, Philadelphia; Palais de Tokyo, Paris;
ICA London, UK; La
Biennale de Montréal; and John Connelly Presents, New York. In 2014 Treleaven's drawings were included in the final segment of 'Outside the Lines' at the
Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, a major survey of contemporary abstraction.[3]
Films
Treleaven's first film Queercore: A Punk-u-mentary was produced in 1996, a documentary on the
queercore scene in the 1990s.[4][5]
In 2002 Treleaven presented an overview of his independent publishing experiences in a film entitled The Salivation Army which has been screened at
MOMA and
Art Basel, Switzerland.[6]
In 2005 photographer/director
Carter Smith approached Treleaven about adapting his published horror story, Bugcrush, into Smith's
Sundance Film Festival award-winning short film. Director
Steven Spielberg has openly lauded the film.[7]
In March 2011, The Museum of Modern Art in New York (
MOMA) featured a program of Treleaven's films as part of the
Queer Cinema from the Collection: Today and Yesterday program, curated by artist
AA Bronson and Joshua Siegel, Associate Curator, Department of Film, at The Museum of Modern Art.
Publications and Zines
Concurrent with the documentary Queercore: A Punk-u-mentary, Treleaven created an illustrated
zine project called This Is The Salivation Army (1996–1999): a mix of
punk,
goth,
occult, and
industrial music aesthetics, alongside homages to iconoclasts like
William S. Burroughs,
Brion Gysin,
William Blake, and
Derek Jarman. The zine was a seeding ground for a variety of concepts and styles that would continue to appear in Treleaven's visual art. Books, zines and independently produced publications continue to be a recurring motif throughout his work.
In 2006 a book marking the 10th anniversary of the This Is The Salivation Army project was published by Printed Matter (NY) and
Art Metropole (Toronto), containing an entire reprint of the zines alongside more recent drawings and collages.
Treleaven's contribution to artist publications has been acknowledged in the books, In Numbers: Serial Publications by Artists Since 1955 (JRP|Ringier 2009),[9]The Magazine – Documents of Contemporary Art Series (MIT Press 2015) and Showboat: Punk, Sex, Bodies (Dashwood 2016).
Filmography
Last 7 Words (2009), actors:
Genesis P-Orridge, soundtrack by Locrian (Terence Hannum & André Foisy)
Silver (2006), actors:
AA Bronson, soundtrack by Andrew Zealley
Grey Book (catalogue), by Scott Treleaven, published by The Breeder gallery, Athens, 2008
Some Boys Wander By Mistake (catalogue), by Scott Treleaven, with texts by
Dennis Cooper, Terence Hannum, and
Jack Pierson, co-published by Kavi Gupta Gallery, John Connelly Presents & Marc Selwyn Fine Art, 2007,
ISBN978-1-4243-4215-0
We want some too: Underground desire and the reinvention of mass culture, by Hal Niedzviecki,
Penguin Putnam, 2000,
ISBN0-14-029172-5
This Is The Salivation Army, issues 1–8, by Scott Treleaven, 1996 to 1999
This Is The Salivation Army, issue 10, by Scott Treleaven, Art Gallery of York University, 2004 ('The Salivation Army' film is considered issue #9; issue 10 was an addition to This Is the Salivation Army zines in name only and not considered part of the original run)[citation needed]