Kaltblut Magazine - "Ascendance" Editorial

  • Celine Fortenbacher

https://www.kaltblut-magazine.com/ascendance-by-celine-fortenbacher/ Photography and creative direction by: Celine Fortenbacher / www.celine-fortenbacher.com / Instagram: @celineforten Model: Jugu with agency D1 Models / Instagram: @w3b_st4r Model: Anairin / Instagram: @ana1r1n Fashion: Styling by myself with vintage clothing from my grandmother I’m a German-Polish dancer and photographer, currently also working on filmmaking based in London. Throughout the 5 years since moving to London, the London ballroom scene has been a home to me, and this editorial was shot with two members of the London ballroom community in London, Notting Hill: Jugu and Anairin. Both Jugu and Anairin are queer models, performers and overall artists within and outside of the ballroom scene. Jugu is a model and performer, born in Uganda, and moved to London when he was 15 years old. He’s been in ballroom for two years and counting, is part of the Kiki House of Louboutin in the Kiki scene and walks Runway and Vogue fem at balls. Anairin is from London and a fashion stylist, has worked as a creative director on fashion shoots, as well as continuously performed and modelled as well, and walks Vogue fem at balls when they’re on. Ideas of femininity and masculinity are still very much tied to heteronormative, stereotypical expectations. Ballroom has always found ways not to conform to those, or „use“ them in a different way by subverting these binary notions. The ballroom community, much like a wall of flowers, offers their members chosen families, houses, as a constant journey of growth, self-worth and self-expression. Being in ballroom is a long time commitment, from which you grow and ascend gradually, the longer you’re in it and the more you experience yourself as a voguer. While I am a guest in this space as a cis white woman, it is important to note that ballroom has been created for and by Black trans women and the Black and Latinx LGBTQIA+ Community. The cultural history behind ballroom is what has informed the language of ballroom culture and voguing as we see it today and in categories such as vogue fem, to name a few. Please consider donating to either of the below charities if you are in a position to do so and come from a place of privilege. If you are interested in ballroom and you are queer, Black and trans, please contact: David Milan @davidxmilan, Andra Ambrosia Gucci @so.ambrosia, Sophie Yukiko St Laurent @sophieyukikosaint, Georgina St Laurent @georginastlaurent. Resources, charities and funds to donate to: https://linktr.ee/celeesi