Zackary Drucker


Zackary Drucker is an American trans woman multimedia artist, LGBT activist, actress, and television producer. She is a consultant on the TV series Transparent and is based out of Los Angeles. Drucker is an artist whose work explores themes of gender and sexuality and critiques predominant two-dimensional representations. Drucker has stated that she considers discovering, telling, and preserving trans history to be not only an artistic opportunity but a political responsibility. Drucker's work has been exhibited in galleries, museums, and film festivals including but not limited to the 2014 Whitney Biennial, MoMA PS1, Hammer Museum, Art Gallery of Ontario, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern art.

Early life

Zackary Drucker was born in 1983 and raised in Syracuse, New York by what she calls "two really fantastic, progressive, educated parents." Her paternal grandfather, Eugene Drucker, was an aeronautical engineering professor at Syracuse University who consulted on the Apollo space program. She earned an M.F.A. from the California Institute of the Arts in 2007 and a B.F.A. from the School of Visual Arts in 2005. In 2006, Drucker made her first television appearance as a contestant on Jeffrey Deitch's Artstar.
After graduating from CalArts in 2007, Drucker decided to stay in Los Angeles. Photographs from her graduate thesis show, "5 East 73rd Street", feature photographs of mentor Flawless Sabrina. That same year, her work was included in a group exhibition called Girly Show: Pin-ups, Zines & the So-Called Third Wave at the Wignall Museum of Contemporary Art at Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga.
Drucker did not have role models growing up, but her parents were progressive and supported her gender nonconformity. In high school, Drucker aligned herself with Kate Bornstein's books about ways of living that do not ascribe to traditional gender conventions.

Personal life

When Drucker met Rhys Ernst, Drucker had recently graduated from the School of Visual Arts and was on the TV show "Artstar". Drucker had never dated a man before and Ernst had never dated a woman. In 2014, Drucker and Ernst had a show at the Whitney Museum of American Art which captured them in day-to-day relatable scenarios like celebrating anniversaries, staying in, or relaxing by the pool. The former couple published the photographs of them together, which the New York Times, stated was an important public record for transgender life. Although the couple is no longer together, Drucker and Ernst want to show that transgender people can live ordinary lives, filled with love. In a 2014 magazine, Drucker stated that she hopes that one day we can surpass the binaries of gender entirely.

Career

In 2011, Drucker and photographer Amos Mac collaborated to make a series of photographs in Drucker's hometown of Syracuse, titled "Home is Where the Heart is, Distance is Where You Hang Your Heart." This series was also published in magazine form, titled "TransLady Fanzine".
Drucker and collaborator Rhys Ernst were included in the first iteration of the Hammer/LAX Art biennial. There they premiered the film "She Gone Rogue" and the film was also included in Outfest 2013. "She Gone Rogue" includes several of Drucker's mentors including Holly Woodlawn, Vaginal Davis, and Flawless Sabrina.
In 2014, Drucker and Ernst exhibited "Relationship", at the Whitney Biennial, through a series of photos that chronicled the process and evolution of the couple's relationship and gender transitions. The photographic series was later exhibited at Luis De Jesus Gallery, where Drucker is represented. In 2016, "Relationship" was released as a book.
Since 2013, Drucker had worked as a consultant and producer on Amazon's original series Transparent. Media scholar Nicole Morse argues that Drucker’s use of double casting in Transparent brings to light transfeminine history from the 1930s to 1994. For this role, Drucker was also involved with writing, hiring, casting, producing, providing notes on script, offering feedback, and postproduction. According to the New York Times Magazine, Drucker's and Ernst's goal for Transparent is to ensure that trans people are depicted authentically on screen and that they are also working behind the scenes. Drucker mostly contributed to the plot, script, wardrobe, and casting of episode 8, "Best New Girl" from Season 1. In this episode, Drucker believed it was crucial to capture the historical tension between those who identified as male cross-dressers and those who transition. In Season 2, Drucker was involved with shaping the historical context and casting.
In 2015, Drucker joined the cast of the E! docu-series, I Am Cait. She was also served as a supervising producer on the Emmy-nominated series of docu-shorts, This is Me.
In 2017, Drucker collaborated with the ACLU, Laverne Cox, Molly Crabapple, and Kim Boekbinder, in making a video about transgender history and resistance, called "Time Marches Forward & So Do We".
Drucker continues her art practice, working independently on film and photography projects.
Through her artworks, Drucker shares and uncovers forgotten histories of transgender people.

Exhibitions, film festivals, performances

  • 2007- "Girly Show: Pin-ups, Zines & the So-Called Third Wave", Wignall Museum of Contemporary Art
  • 2009 - NOW Fest, "P.I.G." a multimedia performance and film with Wu Ingrid Tsang, Mariana Marroquin, REDCAT
  • 2011 - 54th Venice Biennale, Swiss Off-Site Pavilion
  • 2012 - "At least you know: you exist", short film, Hammer Museum
  • 2012 - "Female Trouble" curated by Dirty Looks NYC, "Fish" video, Human Resources LA
  • 2012 - "Zackary Drucker: At Least You Know You Exist" July 7 - September 10, 2012 MoMA PS1, New York
  • 2014 - Whitney Biennial, "Relationship", photo series with Rhys Ernst, Whitney Museum of American Art
  • 2019 - "School for Endurance Work," Cal State LA Fine Arts Gallery

    Filmography

Film and video art

Television

Performance