8 WWW.GUlLFORDIAN.GOM i -ST0R.T ®T faSiMEtt E&STOM Glitter, high-heeled shoes, and partial nudity are all familiar sights to Guilford students. Hell, any given Friday night is sure to include all three within the first few hours alone. But take all that, add a dash of prose, a snippet of song, a few monologues, and mix it together with a rousing bit of provocative, powerful performance on the Dana stage - well, then you have something a bit more unique. More specifically, you have the nationaljy-renowned Sex Workers' Art Show, which came to Guilford for the second year in a row on March 24. March 24 was a dismal and dreary Tuesday night, but you wouldn't have known it by the looks of the crowd in 'Oh my God, I never thought Dana. The auditorium's front hall was I could get on stage and say packed with students before the doors to the something before.'" show even opened. Over the next few years, the show grew I was pleasantly surprised as I walked, wet from a community project to a touring phe- and shivering, into Dana. This was a good nomenon that reaches 10,000 people each F E ATU RE S P«0T0S M&SiMEU EAST0M AIEB TREV0R €0RMlNG turnout for any small campus - let alone a campus that's not exactly famous for stu dent participation. What made this event so appealing? For some students, the attraction was sim ple curiosity. 'I actually have no idea what's going year. Being a touring show, the lineup of perform ers changes from year to year. This year's per formers were author Chris Kraus, writer and. pom performer Lorelei Lei, Headmistress of the New York School of Burlesque Jo Weldon, performing artist Erin Markey, burlesque to be going on," admitted first-year Molly dancer Simone De La Getto, musical perform- Lonergan. "I just hope to get a perspective on er Reginald Lamar, and performer - whose (sex work)." legal name is - The World Famous Bob. Others had a more straightforward answer Bob set the mood for the show by perform- for me. ing her opening piece (a hilarious monologue "People love sex," said senior Imeh Ntuen. about her teenage years) in a full-length, bright "That's definitely why there are so many blue sequined dress. Giddy from laughing, I people here." awaited the next glitzy performer in tittering I got my definitive answer once the lights anticipation.- . / - dimmed and the show started. Annie Oakley, But what made the show so captivating was the show's curator and director, pranced on that the next performer was actually nothing stage (an admirable feat in the high-heels she like Bob. I was peering into the wings, hoping was wearing), grabbed the microphone and for some glimpse of bright feathers or another enthusiasticdly shouted: sequined dress when out walked a calm, soft- "I bet you're here to see naked ladies, aren't spoken Lorelei Lei. She didn't dance or sing, you?" and her outfit contained minimal glitter, but The crowd responded with an appreciative she nonetheless held the audience enraptured roar, and a beaming Oakley introduced her as she read a lyrical story based on her own show. experiences. This is the Sex Workers' Art Show's 7^ Already, I was a bit surprised at the content national tour, but the show actually began of the show, but that was only the beginning as a collaborative community, art project in of it. Over the next two houm, each performer Olympia, Washington. Fed up with the lack of brought something so unique and vivid to the discussion about the sex industry, Oakley sent stage that any preconceived idea I had about out a call for submissions of art of any kind the sex industry was immediately changed, from current and former sex workers. Kraus read a section from her writing; "The response was overwhelming," said Weldon performed a burlesque dance along Oakley. "The community totally came out, with step-by-step instructions and a personal and the people who were involved were like, monologue; Getto danced and sang an origi nal song; Lamar played piano and belted along, and Markey performed a scene from a musical she wrote about stripping. All of these performances, though varied, shared a com mon thread: they all served to open eyes, break stereotypes, and allow normally silenced sex workers a space to share their talents. For Oakley, these are the main purposes of the show. "Sex workers are visible in that there is pom everywhere, but they are totally silent," said Oakley. "If you talk to (Weldon), she'll tell you she was a stripper for 15 years, and she was never treated like she had anything important to say. This show allows a space for people to (spe^ up) and for others to hear it." And hear it they did. As exciting as the show is for its visual and entertainment aspects, many Guilford students also found it an opportunity to gain a valuable perspec tive. "(Sex work) is one of the largest indus tries in the world, and it's one of the least talked about," said Senior Sara Eisenberg, who helped organize the show. "And just like any of ^e other things that people are fed stigmas about, having discussions about it is very important." Once the show ended, students were given a chance to participate in discussions, wheth er through mingling with the performers in the front hall, or by staying for the Q&A that followed. As the crowds dispersed back into the dreary evening, I realized how little it mat tered why people turned out for this event - what mattered was that they came at all. It wasn't about what you brought with you, but instead, what you took away. Oakley is very aware of that. "This show is not directly responsible for the change in sex worker's profiles, but it has contributed to a culture where sex workers have started to be heard," said Oakley. "I think things are moving forward slowly." If other people's experience was anything like mine, then things certainly are moving forward. I left that evening amused and enter tained, but - more importantly- educated and with an invaluable new understanding of an age-old industry. Clockwise, from top: Simone de la Getto performs her original song; sophomore Andrew Slater slips a bill into Jo Weldon’s "tip jar" shoes; sophomore Max Cohan reads off questions that Weldon often got asked while stripping; first-year Kaylyn Howard, sophomore Paul McCullough and senior Imeh Ntuen receive new identities during an interactive demonstration illustrating the elusiveness of the "American dream."