Jules Petru Fricker
“I am Jules, a 35-year-old Swiss-Romanian genderfluid artist, choreographer, and performer, formerly known under my drag persona LEGZ or Shiaz Legz.”
Photography by Stathis Roukas
Your work combines many disciplines and art forms. What about these mediums (of choreography, dance, and moving image) speaks to you as an artist, and how would you describe the journey to reaching this artistic identity?
“I started with my Bachelor's art studies in Zürich learning all about audiovisual storytelling which formed a big part of my practice before I dipped into the drag scene. It all started with a parody in 2014. For a while, I was hooked on performing in clubs and bars, back then as Shiaz Legz. In recent years I shifted my working environment to the theater where I create my work as a choreographer and performer. So with all those previous stations in mind, it comes only naturally to me to include them in my working process. My last solo performance ” between – a queer sci-fi rite” started for example with my childhood archive of many hours of DV footage of me dancing and performing in the living room. This massive amount of footage was filmed by my grandfather and father and in the pandemic I had time to look at them and start to engage with them. I have decided to use that very personal footage in my work and asked myself what the queer body as an archive means."
What inspires your work and what is your creative process?
“For me, every creative endeavor is kind of unique in how I navigate through the process. It usually starts though with a vision or topic. For my last solo, I was drawn to the sci-fi aesthetic as an allegory to how I would perceive my role in the world as a queer person, feeling a lot of alienation in my young adulthood. I wanted to reclaim that role of the otherworldly as something beautiful and enriching.”
"Now, I am in the middle of delving into queer ancestors and I look into people who paved the way for us. I am very excited for the next year to dig deeper and show work-in-progress in spring in Basel, Switzerland, and a residency, but also research projects abroad."
How would you describe the relationship and the limits/differentiation between you as "Jules Petru Fricker" and your alter ego "LEGZ"?
“LEGZ gave me a lot of power and freedom in trying out, sketching, and performing unfinished ideas and concepts without any limitation or fear. LEGZ was a good way for me to find my artistic voice, be in a faster production mode, and get instant feedback. I would come up with a concept and 3 days later would perform it in a drag show. My alter ego will always be a part of me that I can pull from even though I am not performing in club spaces and the queer underground anymore. But it will always be a part of my practice and therefore is part of my name that reveals already the many facets: Jules my nickname since a young age, Petru my father's name and my middle name and Fricker the name of my mum, and last but not least my alter ego LEGZ (formerly Shiaz Legz) that is until today my Insta name.”
You describe your work as political — as a form of resistance to, and critique of, the (hetero)normative society. Moreover, as part of a recent performance you wrote the words "CEASEFIRE NOW" on your body, thus using your body as a canvas for an urgent political demand. How does this demand/cry for justice and peace fit into your wider work? Is this something you have incorporated into your art before?
“I started in the queer underground drag scene and for me, drag is always inherently political, and so am I. The “CEASEFIRE NOW” tattoo was a fast decision after I performed the piece without any writing on my back. In the performance I start with a rebirth, lying on the floor as a knot of an unformed (un)human being, there is a lot of haze, and minimal lights, and together with the sound of my collaborator Grinderteeth we create this dark energy. One could not unsee parallels to the Palestine tragedy that was unfolding before our eyes, so the initial image I created was already tainted by the grievance of the ongoing humanitarian tragedy. Artists have always had political views and engage in issues of the day: Being part of the world that we are living in and bringing that into the workplace is for me the essential part of being an artist. If I don't do that I find myself being rather a puppet than an artist – shallow and meaningless. It is important for us not to look away - if we have a learning to take away for example the Nazi era. Jewish and by the way also queer people were murdered left and right and everyone else was looking away. My stance is that I will not accept any humanitarian violation and use my voice to say: not in my name. It came just naturally to me to include my body as a canvas and a political message - especially because I was performing in the capital of Germany, Berlin. I remember Madonna did something similar for her concerts 10 years ago, back then members of Pussy Riot were incarcerated in Russia and I was inspired by that. I asked around to see if there was a way to get a tattoo in Berlin for the next show without knowing how the ink would behave - but I gave it a chance. During the very physical piece of an hour, one could see how the ink was dripping in this hyperreal way. It left me speechless when I saw a picture of that performance. For me it was a way of making sense of what I was doing on stage: including the duality of art and beauty, but also thinking constantly of the injustice and brutality that the Palestinian people met. It gave me a sense of purpose that I could use my voice and not be silenced under this numbing collective experience of suffering and empathy and solidarity for the Palestinian people. The special context and the fear-mongering climate in Germany and the cancel culture of artists who speak out against a genocide happening in front of our eyes left me quite speechless. And I must say that I am grateful for DOCK11 and the director's backing - I was ready to risk that my last show would be canceled - because that could have easily happened in the current political climate in Germany.”
Did you have any queer role models? (If so, who?)
“I have so many queer role models, that I decided to make a piece about my queer ancestors. I find it very important to honor my ancestors that we as queer people can so much build upon. I am right now in the research phase of that new piece, but I am deliberately taking a lot of time with the new performance piece. I find it quite luxurious in the contemporary art world context that I can take that time to distill my message distinctly. I kind of see my queer role models strutting with me on that wave alongside me: the trans activist Sylvia Rivera is one of my big role models, but also people like Sophie or Diamanda Galas are queer role models as well as my all-time favorite queen Christeene and love how Alok V. Menon is so talented in finding words. Recently I also discovered the Jewish dyke Shatzi Weisberger who is a queer ancestor who keeps fighting for a free Palestine.”
Are there upcoming events/appearances/releases that you would like to bring attention to?
“I just finished my 10th performance of “between – a queer sci-fi rite” in Berlin and am very happy with the resonance and feedback that I got. I am willing to show the piece in another country if the opportunity arises, maybe even in Belgium. I have a lot of friends from my studies at the Dutch Art Institute who live in Brussels and I would be so happy to show them what I am working on right now. I will focus the rest of next year on my new work around queer ancestry, where I am going to research in New York for a bit. The piece will contain longer research than the prior piece did. I am thankful for the time that I can invest to make art that has something to say.”