Soft Landing recreates the harem — in contemporary terms of American masculinity — as a study in containment.
Where Ingres’ bathers are attended to and observed by a gaze positioned entirely outside the frame, the men in these two merged diptychs are staged in a similar fashion, dressed in the branding of a different century’s silk.
The comparison is about a culture, like Ingres’ world, where in this case straight and queer men alike are held captive inside the same structure, the closet, neither one built, nor can fully escape.
The eight men gathered here span forty years, 1984 to 2024, and from gym machines to underwear ads and commercials they trace the evolution of the male figure with the confines of US marketing strategies: the American male as an object of desire that is never allowed to be attained. Visible but unreachable, on buildings or video screens high in the sky.
With the collages, one half carries a subtle gravity — held, weighted — and in the second, that same scene shifts almost imperceptibly toward weightlessness, a sense of floating just beginning to take hold. With both the vertical and horizontal versions, a slight vertical shift lifts the second panel’s heads toward the frame’s upper register, loosening the composition’s hold on the bottom edge — the same scene, caught just before it lets go of the ground.This marks the transition from social obligation and conformity for the sake of the other, to the quiet possibility of change and self-determination for the sake of self.
When one person is reduced, all are reduced. The closet was built for a time when people were to be directed, staged, placed within a system that refuses individuality, diversity, or uniqueness in favor of conformity. And for the fact that the closet is still present in our world, we are all diminished by it.
— Behan