Your love is not good

Johanna Hedva, 1984-

Book - 2023

"At an otherwise forgettable party in Los Angeles, a queer Korean American painter spots a woman who instantly controls the room: gorgeous and distant and utterly white, the center of everyone's attention. Haunted into adulthood by her Korean father's abandonment of his family, as well as the specter of her beguiling, abusive white mother, the painter finds herself caught in a perfect trap. She wants Hanne, or wants to be her, or to sully her, or destroy her, or consume her, or some confusion of all the above. Since she's an artist, she will use art to get closer to Hanne, beginning a series of paintings with her new muse as model. As for Hanne, what does she want? Her whiteness seems sometimes as cruel as a new sheet of... paper. When the paintings of Hanne become a hit, resulting in the artist's first sold-out show, she resolves to bring her new muse with her to Berlin, to continue their work, and her seduction. But, just when the painter is on the verge of her long sought-after breakthrough, a petition started by a Black performance artist begins making the rounds in the art community, calling for the boycott of major museums and art galleries for their imperialist and racist practices. Torn between her desire to support the petition, to be a success, and to possess Hanne, the painter and her reality become more unstable and disorienting, unwilling to cut loose any one of her warring ambitions, yet unable to accommodate them all. Is it any wonder so many artists self-destruct so spectacularly? Is it perhaps just a bit exciting to think she could too?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Published
Sheffield : And Other Stories 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Johanna Hedva, 1984- (author)
Physical Description
324 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781913505660
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Hedva (On Hell) paints an unsettling if messy portrait of a queer biracial artist reckoning with the ways whiteness pervades her work and desires. Born to a Korean father and a white mother, the unnamed narrator has become "bitter about being neither one total thing nor the other." In trying to come to terms with her complex identity, she develops a masochistic infatuation with a wealthy Iranian art student who "act like a white girl," and hires a Japanese Korean dominatrix for "antihumiliation" services. As a white-passing painter, the narrator wonders if her "self-portraits count as portraits of a white person." Later, she meets a beautiful white woman whom she refers to as "The Twin" at a party and enlists her as a model. Success takes her and her new muse from L.A. to Berlin, but after a Black artist calls for a boycott of commercial art galleries, she reexamines her aspirations. Loosely structured around various artistic concepts (sections are headed with definitions of chiaroscuro, sfumato, etc.), the narrative itself is a bit disjointed, but Hedva's bold brushstrokes give readers a clear view into her protagonist's mind and heart. Though the various parts don't quite cohere into a satisfying narrative, Hedva is consistently savvy and surprising on the page. Agent: Clare Mao, Europa Content. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A queer Korean American artist interrogates the legacy and aftermath of Whiteness in the form of beauty, suffering, desire, and the complex interchange of power in this autofictive roman à clef. The narrator of this lush and brutal novel is a study in dualities. Her father is Korean and abandons the family when she is around 10; her mother is White and loves her in a narcissistic, abusive way. Moreover, the narrator is a painter whose career centers in both the sweltering sunshine of Los Angeles and the eternal nocturne of Berlin, a figurative artist whose work underscores the complex interdependence of beauty, race, and power even as it nods to Western art's tradition of "painting beautiful white women, the kind who always had more money, beauty and power than the painter"; and she is a queer woman with a submission kink whose "fetish for giving away…power [is] actually about controlling it." After a period of relative stasis in her career, the narrator has two important solo shows lined up but finds herself without inspiration. Her search for a muse leads to Hanne, an LA art-world siren who initially attracts her with the proud, heedless power of her beauty and quickly becomes the focal point not only for the narrator's art, but also for the dynamic conflict between the narrator's own ideas about Whiteness--how it is "hard to paint precisely because it's everywhere and in everything.…It's the image of the world. And yet no one can see it for itself because there's no such thing as an ipseity of white…"--and desire, where it comes from and who controls both its expression and its repercussions. The paintings of Hanne result in the narrator's first sold-out show, but just as she is poised to capitalize on that success, an influential Black performance artist publishes a petition calling for all artists of color to boycott museums and galleries with operating budgets over $1 million for their imperialist and racist exploitation of those artists, with the narrator's upcoming venues among them. Conflicted over the opposing impulses of her desire for recognition and solidarity, economic success and artistic authenticity, excellence and anonymity, the narrator spends a long, dark night of the soul spiraling around the splendor of self-destruction like a moth to a singular flame. Impassioned, wry, compassionate, and hell-raising, this novel illuminates its frangible but resilient world the way a painter uses color on canvas to illuminate the focal point of her vision--building layer after layer of meaning until the image appears as if it has always been there for us to see. A resplendent and fearless book. Must read. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.