DULOU, Tom
The Eighth Condition
From the brutalist concrete of the Watermill Center to the high-gloss enclaves of Fire Island, The Eighth Condition examines the collapse of the private subject into the scripted role.
The text dissects the aestheticization of grief through a romance with Robert Wilson’s personal assistant, set against the backdrop of the master’s hospitalization and subsequent death. As the institution reveals its form – a panopticon that remains synchronized even in the absence of a witness – a persona named Gala emerges. Armed with red heels and acid house, Gala serves as a shield to navigate the fascination of the stage and the symbolic weight of occupying the boss’s bed.
This is a critical autopsy of the queer archive and the performance of influence. Moving between the pressurized cabin of an airplane and the glass walls of a gallery space, the work explores the limit where the staged life becomes the only remaining reality.
[publisher's note]
Self-Published, 2026
Queer Culture / Artists' Writings