• About
    • Business
    • Living
    • The Crossroads
    • History
    • About the CCA
    • CCA Board
    • Crossroads Truck
    • Press
    • Member Discounts
    • 20th Street Streetscape
    • Street Tree Initiative
    • Liquor Licenses
    • PIEA
    • First Friday Sponsors
  • Contact
  • Community Resources
    • Community Improvement District
    • Proposed Baseball Stadium
    • Security
    • Behavioral Health Services
    • Graffiti Cleanup
    • Urban Forest
  • Become a Member
  • Log In
  • Your Corner
    • Your Profile
    • Add Event
    • Add/Edit Your Discount
    • WordPress Admin
    • Add New Member
  • When autocomplete results are available use up and down arrows to review and enter to go to the desired page. Touch device users, explore by touch or with swipe gestures.

Crossroads Arts District

Kansas City's Creative Neighborhood

  • Events
  • First Friday in the Crossroads
    • About First Fridays
    • This First Friday in the Crossroads
    • Our First Friday Sponsors
  • Explore
    • Arts
    • Entertainment
    • Event Space
    • Food & Drink
    • Retail
    • Services
  • Visitor Info
    • Getting Around
    • FAQ

Questing Beasts – Emily Nickel

Sep
3
11pm–8:00pm

Crossroads Community Association

  • 115 W. 18th Street
  • Kansas City, MO 64108
Crossroads Community Association

Go to map

In Arthurian legend, the Questing Beast was a monster born of a cursed woman. In the story, the woman strikes a deal with the devil to make someone fall in love with her, and thus ultimately brings a curse upon herself. Once born, her child becomes the Questing Beast, a fearsome, snake-headed chimera and the hunting target of many a knight. The beast, through the curse laid on its mother, is born into a world in which its role is cemented and its fate sealed.

I think often in my work about roles which are set out for us by others. As a young woman, I could not help but notice gendered expectations of how I should look and behave, and what skills and career paths I ought to be interested in. Frequently I felt that I did not quite fit in. I often turned to fantasy tales for solace, but there were gendered expectations there too. Female power was often depicted as entirely evil, as with powerful witches, or entirely good, as with angelic princesses. Cursed women, and figures such as the Questing Beast, tugged at my sympathy because of their tragic origins and seemingly incontrovertible fates. Generally, these women sinned by desiring things they should not. At times I wondered what the author was trying to say by including female characters with such unflattering, ill-conceived and petty motivations. What if these cursed women were allowed to step out of these roles? If they wrote their own stories, what would be the purpose of their quests?

In this show, I’ve included a number of works featuring young women and their animal companions on their own individual quests. I invite the viewer to consider what roles each might be playing and what is happening in each story.

© 2025 Crossroads Community Association

Neighborhood Tourist Development Fund
Crossroads Community Association

Site design & development by

Lagom Design