So Many Ways to Hurt You charts the flamboyant life and times of the wrestler ‘Exotic’ Adrian Street, who was born in 1940 to a Welsh mining family in Brynmawr. Through Jeremy Deller’s (b. 1966, UK) candid film, Street’s persona, which seamlessly blends the hyper-camp attributes of post-war pop culture with the hard-edged attitude of his working-class background, shines through, revealing his unique capacity to disrupt gender and class stereotypes. Not only does Street’s story mirror the austerity of post-war Britain – tracing the demise of heavy industry and the rise of the service and entertainment industries – but, perhaps more significantly, the film reflects on the performativity of gender, highlighting its unfixed nature as Street moves surefootedly between his various identities: at once the muscled man, the cross-dresser and the working man.
Mural designed and produced by Imelda Cox
What does it mean to be a man today? The Barbican's Masculinities: Liberation through Photography considers how masculinity has been coded, performed, and socially constructed from the 1960s to the present day.