Frankly Speaking has already been accepted into the following libraries and special collections:
1. Museum of Modern Art, New York City
2. Harvard University’s Widener Library
3. Yale University’s Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library
4. Princeton University's Marquand Library of Art & Archaeology
5. New York University's Bobst Library
6. The Art Institute of Chicago’s Ryerson & Burnham Libraries
7. The University of California, Berkeley Bancroft Library
8. Stanford University's Cecil H. Green Library
9. Stanford University's Art & Architecture Library
10. Columbia University's Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library
11. Cornell University's Olin Library
12. The University of Chicago's Joseph Regenstein Library
13. Rutgers University's Mabel Smith Douglass Library
14. The San Francisco, Oakland and Berkeley Public Libraries
15. The Cleveland Public Library
16. Berkeley Historical Society
17. San Francisco Art Institute's Anne Bremer Memorial Library
18. The Kinsey Institute Library & Special Collections
19. Franklin Furnace, New York City
20. The Ohio State University's Rare Books and Manuscripts Library (Avant Writing Collection)
21. California College of the Arts’ Meyer Library, Oakland
22. San Francisco State University’s J. Paul Leonard Library
23. The University of California, San Diego, The Geisel Library
24. The University of California, Davis, Shields Library
25. University of Southern California's Doheny Memorial Library
26. The University of New Mexico's Zimmerman Library
27. The University of Montana Mansfield Library
28. The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Ricker Library of Architecture and Art
29. The University of Michigan's Art, Architecture & Engineering Library
30. The University of Iowa's Art Library
31. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Davis Library
32. The University of Texas at Austin's Fine Arts Library
33. The University of Minnesota’s Wilson Library
34. The University of Florida's George A. Smathers Libraries
Frank Moore was an American performance artist, shaman, teacher, poet, essayist, painter, musician, and internet/television personality who experimented in art, performance, ritual, and shamanistic teaching from the late 1960s until his death in 2013 in Berkeley, California.
Moore is well known as one of the NEA-funded artists targeted by Jesse Helms in the early ’90s for doing art that was labeled “obscene”. He is also well known for long (5–48 hours) ritualistic performances with audience participation, nudity, and eroticism.
Moore coined the word, “eroplay” to describe physical play between adults released from the linear goals of sex and orgasm. He explored this, and similar concepts in performance and ritual as a way for people to break through isolation, and connect on a deep human level beyond the social and cultural expectations and limitations.
Moore was born with cerebral palsy, could not walk or talk, and wrote books, directed plays, made award-winning films, gave poetry readings, played piano, sang in music jams, lead rock bands, and hosted a live variety show on his radical webstation, which he ran for 14 years. Frank's original oil and digital paintings have been shown across the United States and in Canada. Moore communicated using a laser-pointer and a board of letters, numbers, and commonly used words.
From 1991 to 1999 Frank Moore published and edited the acclaimed underground zine, The Cherotic (r)Evolutionary. In addition to his books, Cherotic Magic, Art of a Shaman, Chapped Lap, Skin Passion and numerous other self-published pieces, Moore was widely published in magazines and books.
In the 1970s, Frank Moore created the popular cabaret show, the Outrageous Beauty Revue. In the 1980s he became one of the United States’ foremost performance artists. In 1992 he was voted Best Performance Artist by the San Francisco Bay Guardian. In 2001 he began producing shows for Berkeley’s public access channel, and these shows continue today. In 2006, Moore became a write-in candidate for President of the United States in the 2008 election, qualifying in 25 states and receiving votes across the country. Since 2011, he has become internationally known for his performance/video archive on Vimeo.com which has been viewed by over 10 million people worldwide.
Frank Moore performed regularly in the San Francisco Bay Area up until his death.
His students and the people influenced by his life/work continue his vision.
In this, the first collection of prose by “one of the U.S.'s most controversial performance artists” (P-Form Magazine), Frank Moore explores his deep and uncompromising vision of human liberation and art as a “battle against fragmentation”.
In the essays, writings and rants of Frankly Speaking, roughly covering the period from the late 1970s until his death in 2013, Moore reveals his plan for the complete political and social transformation of American society (see Platform for Frank’s Presidential Candidacy 2008), stirs up the “art world”, urging fellow artists to truly live their calling and not accept censorship (see Art is Not Toothpaste or The Combine Plot), pulls the reader deeply into the heart of magic, responsibility, shamanism, play, and expanded sexuality (see Dance of No Dancers and States of Tanpan), and much much more.
Frank Moore's essays have been praised by political activists, authors, artists and cultural icons like Bill Mandel, John Sinclair, Penny Arcade, Annie Sprinkle and many others for their comprehensive and revolutionary world-view. The reader gets to join Frank's joyful and fearless digging into the core issues of human experience to get to something deeper: intimacy, tribal community, freedom. Frankly Speaking also gives us a peek into the history of these pieces, which have been widely published all over the world, from the smallest of underground zines to the most established mainstream art journals. But Frank always focused on the small, personal, intimate level, and always fought to stay “underground”. As he writes in Mainstream Avant-Garde?: “The underground is where the real freedom and the real ability to change society are to be found.”
Well, Frank never skips a beat!
“The hardest working shaman” is still keeping us busy!
This mind-blowing collection of his writings roughly covers the late 1970s
until his death in 2013, with new original drawings by LaBash.
Just dip into this rich, full, chunky bowl of Frank's deep vision of life, art,
and freedom, and you will want to keep eating!
And what a deal! As Frank always said, “I am cheap, and available!”
11 Introduction
12 An update of the last 37 years of my life
17 Introduction to Cherotic Apprenticeship
19 Art is Not Toothpaste
22 Art of Living
25 The Art of Breaking Taboos
29 Intro for Campus Quest
30 Censorship Address to the Berkeley City Council
32 Chero
33 Cherotic Healing
42 The Combine Plot
53 The Combine Plot Thickens
61 Conditions
66 Credit Card Morality
69 Cultural Subversion
79 A Dance Ritual
80 Deep Love
81 Eroart, Not Porn
83 Eroplay
94 Eroplay in Life and Art
97 Evolution Ritual
102 Experiments in Magical Change
119 Finally, A Real Candidate for President
122 The Function of the Arts in Culture Today
123 Gestures Intro
129 I Just Ain’t That Good
131 Imagine the Possibilities
139 In Defense of Bad Art
142 The Inner Maze
209 Inter-Penetration
213 Mainstream Avant-Garde?
217 My Sexual Fantasies
218 The Updated Numbers Game
220 Nudity, A Tool of Shamanism
222 An Open Letter to Senator Jesse Helms
224 Out of Isolation: A History of the Video
226 about play (Playing)
228 Performance Introduction
231 The Pipes of Art
232 The Point of Responsibility
236 Post Porn, Post Sex, A New Art Movement
240 Platform for Frank’s Presidential Candidacy 2008
244 Reclaiming Public Reality
246 The Rehearsal
247 Audrey Rubinstein Interview
270 Shamanistic Art
273 Annie Sprinkle’s Post Post Porn Modernist
275 States of Tanpan
287 Tanpan Defined
288 Two Parties: Reviews of Annie Sprinkle & Barb Golden Events
290 What Price Fame
294 About Frank Moore
297 Frank Moore Online
You can also receive the book directly from us for a suggested donation of $10 plus shipping.
Please email us at fmoore@eroplay.com.
You can also read the entire book on The Internet Archive here: https://archive.org/details/frank-moore-frankly-speaking/mode/2up
Other books by Frank Moore are available here.
“You know, I knew Frank was smart but, god damn! I’m going to enjoy this book … I can see I’m going to do some interesting reading. But I suggest that you the listening audience don’t pass this book up because I think, it is not only because Frank was my friend, believe me! I have plenty of friends that write books and I don’t necessarily tell people they should read these books. But this is, I think, enriching, intellectually stimulating material that you don’t want to miss.”
Gerald Smith, political activist /host Radical Perspectives radio show
“Frank is just the gift that keeps on giving....”
Sandy Ford Mock
Truly a landmark event. I look forward to devouring this....
The gruvemeister... (aka Russell Shuttleworth)
"Want to know why Frank Moore was such an influential person in my life. Get the book."
John the Baker, musician, activist
“I read several of the essays today and now, as I am about to go to sleep, I find that I am repeating something that Frank said, and it rang true: we take ourselves way too seriously, and our lives not seriously enough.”
Diane Malek on Amazon (5 star review Seriously!)
Frank Moore’s publishing company, Inter-Relations, just put out a posthumous collection of Frank’s writings called Frankly Speaking. It’s full of great stuff, but I’d like to share here a brief piece, Creating A Masterpiece, that gets at something profound about the creative process, wisdom that is often neglected by teachers.
Fred Hatt, artist
“I’m now making my way through the amazing aurora-suite-inspired “Inner Maze” of “Frankly Speaking” – what a mind-blowing literary acid trip! It is really an incredible prose-poem. At first, I couldn’t read it. My mind didn’t want to expand to the extent “required,” so I skipped it and moved to other chapters. But then I came back to it and found myself getting sucked into its quicksand of vivid imagery and deep ideas. At this point, it might be my favorite part of “Frankly Speaking.” But there are so many good parts, and I’m not even finished!”
Dr. Susan Block, PhD Philosophy
Read her July 2015 review on Amazon
“Oh, you guys: I had a wonderful time at the reading last night. I knew I would. I have to reread (and reread again) the reading you aptly suggested for me (Creating A Masterpiece).”
Diane Malek, after attending Modern Times book party
“I'm definitely looking forward to (reading the book).
Frank's story is one for the ages."
Will Mayo
• • • • • •
Gerald Smith and Michael Diehl interview Corey, Alexi and Erika on their Berkeley Liberation shows, March 8, 2014
• • • • • •
Listen to a special Radical Perspectives on Berkeley Liberation Radio with Gerald Smith, Corey Nicholl, Alexi Malenky and Erika Shaver-Nelson that features readings from many of Frank's books including Frankly Speaking, May 31, 2014.
This website was created and is maintained by Michael LaBash
Copyright 2020 Inter-Relations
Last modified November 8, 2022