This summer, Archival Assistant Roxy Moon had the opportunity to process the G.B. Jones fonds at The ArQuives. Materials in the fonds were donated between 2001 and 2018, and contain textual records, posters, cassettes, VHS tapes, artifacts, and even a sculpture. Through this post, Roxy provides an overview of G.B. Jones’s life, her contributions to punk and queer culture, the development of the queercore movement, and highlights materials from the fonds.
G.B. Jones
G.B. Jones is a Toronto-based artist, musician, filmmaker, and zinester whose drawings have been shown in galleries globally. Her work has been incredibly influential in queer and punk scenes since the 1980s and engages in themes of power, authority, and gender. She is most known for her drawing series called Tom Girls, which parodies the hyper-masculine Tom of Finland artwork, reimagining them with fantasy images of leather dykes and lustful lesbians. Additionally, Jones has directed four films, being The Troublemakers (1990), The Yo-Yo Gang (1992), The Lollipop Generation (2008), which took over 10 years to film, and The Dark End of the Street (2017). Alongside directing, Jones starred in several music videos, short, and feature-length films directed by Canadian filmmaker, photographer, artist, writer, and long-time collaborator Bruce LaBruce.
Moving from Bowmanville to Toronto, Jones became immersed in queer and punk culture. Formed in the 1980s, Jones played drums, guitar, and sang for the all-girl punk band Fifth Column. Beginning as a trio named Second Unit featuring G.B. Jones, Kathleen Pirrie Adams, and Janet Martin, Caroline Azar joined as the singer, becoming Fifth Column in 1981. Fifth Column, referring to a “clandestine group… who attempt to undermine a nation’s solidarity by any means at their disposal” (Britannica), produced experimental post-punk music between the 80s and 90s. Predecessors of the riot grrrl movement, Fifth Column released tracks such as Like This, All Women Are Bitches, and To Sir With Hate, with a lesbian and feminist slant, existing on the edge of acceptable.J.D.s and Queercore
Arguably Jones’s most notable contribution to queer and punk culture is her co-creation of the zine J.D.s with Bruce LaBruce, first published in 1985. Standing for Juvenile Delinquents, as well as many other J.D. combinations readers find fitting, the zine was an anti-assimilationist, anti-capitalist D.I.Y. zine featuring writing, playlists, photography, and artwork. It was through this publication that Jones first debuted her Tom Girls, as well as her other drawings.
Through J.D.s, Jones and LaBruce coined the term Homocore, which later developed into Queercore. Queercore is a punk subculture rooted in D.I.Y. and ‘no-budget’ art, music, and film. Fed up with intolerance towards women and queer and trans people within the punk scene, queercore allowed Jones and LaBruce to reimagine a queer punk culture that they weren’t seeing in the world around them. However, through their assertion of queercore’s existence, it developed into a movement across North America that merged punk radicalism with queer politics – a palpable visual and social culture growing in its wake. While Fifth Column, LaBruce and Jones provide concrete examples of what queercore looks, sounds, and feels like, others over time have populated the movement. Artists and filmmakers like Candy Parker and Vaginal Davis, zines like Bimbox, Jane Gets a Divorce, and Holy Ticlamps, and bands like Nervous Gender, Pansy Division, Tribe 8, and Sta-Prest all reflect queercore’s values and audio/visual cues.G.B. Jones’s fonds are an incredible source on not only queercore and punk history, but also Toronto’s music and art cultures.
CitationsAwe, Emma N. Queercore: The Punk Movement and Their Zines. The Canadian Centre for Gender and Sexual Diversity (CCGSD), https://ccgsd-ccdgs.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Queercore-Booklet.pdf.
“Fifth Column.” Britannica, 3 Jul. 2024, https://www.britannica.com/topic/fifth-column.
“Fifth Column (band).” Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fifth_Column_(band).
“G.B. Jones.” Cooper Cole, https://coopercolegallery.com/artist/g-b-jones/.
Hall, Jake. “Revisiting the seminal queercore movement.” Dazed, 18 Jul. 2016, https://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/32097/1/revisiting-the-seminal-queercore-movement.
Nault, Curran. “Overview.” Queercore: Queer Punk Media Subculture, https://queercorebook.com/historical-overview/.
River, Julie. “Smells Like Queer Spirit: The Lost History of Queercore Punk.” Out Front Magazine, 5 Aug. 2022, https://www.outfrontmagazine.com/smells-like-queer-spirit-the-lost-history-of-queercore-punk/.
Author bio: Roxy Moon holds a Master of Information in Archives and Records Management from the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Information. Prior to this, they completed their BA (Hons) at UofT, where they specialized in Sexual Diversity Studies. They began working/became interested in archives and libraries in 2021 after working as an administrative record-keeper. Their research interests include community and independent archives, archives as sites for resistance and liberation, and how sexuality and gender appear in nation-state propaganda.