Photography Emma Louise SwansonLife & Culture / FeatureLife & Culture / FeatureHow the art of drag helped one young Georgian accept his truthShort film Comfort Zone trains its lens on one of Tbilisi’s brightest performers and highlights the challenges faced by the city’s queer communityShareLink copied ✔️June 29, 2020June 29, 2020Text Emma Elizabeth Davidson Matt Shally by Emma Swanson Where Drag Race offers us a glossy, perfectly packaged, commercialised vision of drag, what’s going on beyond RuPaul’s workroom in the wider world is often very different. Though the show has propelled the art of drag to mainstream consciousness, in many countries drag performers and the queer communities they belong to face judgement, persecution, and sometimes even violence from more conservative members of society. One such place is Tbilisi, where a vibrant drag scene is blossoming in the back rooms and basements of the city’s nightclubs and bars. At Bassiani, Cafe Gallery, and original gay bar Success (which is tragically at risk of closure due to the coronavirus), the LGBTQ+ community converges on the dancefloor, as drag queens, DJs, and dancers put on subversive, DIY shows that highlight the talent and creativity of a new generation of queer Georgians. Now, filmmaker Jordan Blady presents a short feature, entitled Comfort Zone, which trains its lens on Tbilisi’s blossoming drag ball scene and, more particularly, Matt Shally – an actor and performer integral to its community. Beginning with Shally telling the story of how he came to conceptualise a drag alter-ego named Victoria Slutyna, who he describes as ‘an attention whore, emotional, and very aggressive’, he goes on to explain how drag helped him to fully accept and embrace his identity. Leaving Slutyna behind, he is now simply ‘Matt in a dress’, with the looks he wears in Comfort Zone fittingly created by gender-skewing Georgian designer Lavau Shvelidze. With Comfort Zone offering up a powerful message which speaks to Shally’s resilience in the face of opposition when it comes to his identity (notably, he was among those brutalised by Georgian police when Bassiani was raided in 2018), the film also highlights the resilience of queer Georgians as a whole. With 2020 marking the second year in a row the inaugural Tbilisi Pride has been cancelled – first due to violent protests in 2019, and this year thanks to ongoing COVID-19 restrictions – the film demonstrates the LGBTQ+ community of Tbilisi’s refusal to give up in the fight for the acceptance and change they deserve. Watch the film below and check out behind-the-scenes photographs in the gallery above. Donate to the Save Success Bar Gofundme here. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.TrendingThings To Come: Porn saves the world in Maja Malou Lyse’s ‘bimbo sci-fi’The Danish artist’s new show premieres at the 2026 Venice Biennale – here, she discusses her fictional future where ‘porn stars rule the world’ and how it reflects our relationship with images todayArt & PhotographyLife & CultureIs Gen Z the most psychic generation yet? PolaroidArt & PhotographyThree Dazed Clubbers on documenting a complete digital detoxBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismFashionElla Devi is the 18-year-old fashion intern pissing off Trump’s AmericaLife & CultureThe case for wiping your Instagram gridBeauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and eroticaLife & CultureAlhamdulillah! Islamic culture is mainstream nowFashionHow Indian designer Diya Joukani became the coolest girl on the internetEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy