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Posts from the “1970s” Category

Collier Schorr: Stonewall at 50

Posted on June 26, 2019

Chella Man © Collier Schorr, courtesy of the Alice Austen House

In the early hours of June 28, 1969, homeless LGBTQ teens, trans women of color, lesbians, drag queens, gay men, and allies faced down the police during a raid at New York City’s Stonewall Inn – kicking off a rebellion on the streets of Greenwich Village and igniting the global Gay Liberation Movement.

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Half a century after this historic uprising, American photographer Collier Schorr pays homage to 15 leading intergenerational LGBTQ activists and artists – including Eileen Myles, Zackary Drucker, and Judy Bowen – in a series of black and white portraits now on view in Stonewall at 50.

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Native New Yorker Karla Jay was an early member of the Gay Liberation Front (GLF). “Stonewall came along in this age of rebellion against societal norms,” she says. “There were so many things happening in 1969: the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Panthers, the Young Lords, and the Women’s Movement. I was a radical feminist and belonged to a group called Redstockings. We didn’t invent rebellion, but we ran with it because we were sex radicals.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck Online

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Agosto Machado © Collier Schorr, courtesy of the Alice Austen House

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, Art, Exhibitions, Huck, Photography

Urban Impulses: Latin American Photography from 1959 to 2017

Posted on June 26, 2019

Pablo Ortiz Monasterio. Flying low, Mexico City, 1989 © Pablo Ortiz Monasterio Courtesy of the artist

“I am not a liberator,” said Ernesto “Che” Guevara in 1958, just one year before the Cuban Revolution transformed the landscape of Latin America. “Liberators do not exist. It exists when people liberate themselves.”

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This historic movement for independence from western imperialism marks the starting point of the new exhibition Urban Impulses: Latin American Photography from 1959 to 2017. Curated by María Wills Londoño and Alexis Fabry, the show features more than 200 works by over 70 artists; including masters of the medium Alberto Korda, Graciela Iturbide, Sergio Larrain, as well as lesser-known artists such as Enrique Zamudio, Beatriz Jaramillo, and Yolanda Andrade.

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“The purpose of the show is to bring a counterpoint to Latin American photography beyond gazes that have an exoticising point of view,” says Londoño. “We want to introduce new perspectives focusing on the chaos and crisis of utopian models of modernity.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck Online

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Álvaro Hoppe. Calle Alameda, Santiago, 1983

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Exhibitions, Huck, Latin America, Photography

Roger Gastman: Beyond the Streets

Posted on June 20, 2019

Lil’ Crazy Legs during shoot for Wild Style. Riverside Park NY, 1983. Photo Martha Cooper

Graffiti first emerged on the streets of New York and Philadelphia half a century ago as marker tags by young teens with a desire to make their mark. A new art form emerged, and from it styles bloomed, transforming the age-old desire to mark our territory in the most literal way.

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Graffiti hit like a bomb, leaving cities covered with the most electric kind of public art: one done for love, not money, at the risk of arrest, fines, and imprisonment. It spread from city to city like a virus through movies like Wild Style and Style Wars, books like Subway Art, and art exhibitions dating back to 1973. It inspired generations of artists from all around the globe to create, innovate, and leave their mark on society in a manner that was nothing short of in your face.

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Although New York has largely been scrubbed clean of the art form it unleashed upon the world, “it is still considered the number one graffiti tourism destination,” says Roger Gastman, curator of Beyond the Streets. The exhibition features hundreds of large scale works by over 150 contemporary artists, including Charlie Ahearn, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Henry Chalfant, Martha Cooper, the Guerilla Girls, Eric HAZE, Jenny Holzer, Barry McGee, and Dash Snow.

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Read he Full Story at Huck Online

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Style Wars car by NOC 167 with door open, man reading newspaper. 96th Street Station, New York, NY, 1981. Photo Martha Cooper

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Exhibitions, Graffiti, Huck, Photography

Niki de Saint Phalle: The Female Gaze in a World of Men

Posted on May 30, 2019

Vogue 1971. Portrait of artist Niki de Saint-Phalle painting one of her large Nanas sculptures in her studio outside Paris. (Photo by Jack Nisberg/Condé Nast via Getty Images)

“Very early on I decided to become a heroine,” said artist, filmmaker, and feminist Niki de Saint Phalle (1930–2002). “What did it matter who I would be? The main thing was that it had to be difficult, grandiose, exciting.

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De Saint Phalle shaped her destiny from a young age after realizing those closest to her would destroy her if they could. Physically abused by her mother and sexually abused by her father as a child, de Saint Phalle refused to become a victim of the petty bourgeois who raised her to be a housewife and mother.

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“I could not identify with Mother, our grandmothers, our aunts, or Mother’s friends. Their territory seemed too restrictive for my taste,” de Saint Phalle said. “I want the world that belonged to men… Very early I got the message that men had the power and I wanted it. Yes, I would steal their fire from them.”

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Read the Full Story at Jacques Marie Mage

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Niki de Saint Phalle (kneeling) by Dennis Hopper, 1963

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Jacques Marie Mage, Painting, Women

Vivien Goldman: Revenge of the She-Punks

Posted on May 29, 2019

Debbie Harry, London 1979. © Janette Beckman

Vivien Goldman still remembers what it was like to be the only woman in the room when she began working as a music journalist in London during the early 1970s. “My whole generation was very into music and there was a very vibrant music press known as ‘the inkies,’” Goldman recalls.  “It’s a relic now, but it was started by young rebels.”

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“There were hardly any women in the field. When you look back it’s insane. I remember big battles at editorial meetings. There was real hostility to my ideas of covering more women and encouraging women. People would say things like, ‘Women don’t make music. Women aren’t into music.’ I was like, ‘Look at me! I’m here in front of you!’ But it was a phalanx of the patriarchy.”

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For Goldman, punk was and forever will be a liberating force for women – one which she explores across time and around the globe in the captivating new book Revenge of the She-Punks: A Feminist Music History from Poly Styrene to Pussy Riot (University of Texas Press). Taking a lateral approach, Goldman weaves a fascinating tapestry that threads together themes of identity, money, love, and protest over five decades.

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Read the Full Story at Huck Online

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Poison Ivy, The Cramps © Janette Beckman

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Huck, Photography

Kim Gordon: Lo-Fi Glamour

Posted on May 22, 2019

Sound for Andy Warhol’s Kiss LP cover

At age 13, Kim Gordon and her best friend would put “Heroin” by the Velvet Underground on the turntable and give it a spin. Pretending to be high, they’d start to nod, moving in slow motion until the choreography left them lying on the floor.

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Restless in West LA, Gordon looked east to Andy Warhol’s Silver Factory – the artist’s famous New York City studio – for inspiration while growing up. She was unaware of the future that was to come, which included, among other things, an invitation to re-score Warhol’s 1963–64 silent film Kiss, which features appearances by Jane Holzer, Gerard Malanga, Marisol, and Pierre Restaney.

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The project became the centrepiece for a new exhibition, titled Kim Gordon: Lo-Fi Glamour. Featuring paintings, drawings, and never-before-seen female figurative works, the show highlights Gordon’s lifelong love of the artist.

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Read the Full Story at Huck Online

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Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Exhibitions, Huck, Music

Mariette Pathy Allen: Rites of Passage

Posted on May 20, 2019

Cori and poodle, 1987. © Mariette Pathy Allen, courtesy of the artist.

The many expressions of identity that exist on the gender spectrum is a subject of tremendous depth and breadth, though it has largely existed underground in realms secreted away from the masses. It has given birth to a culture so innovative and rich that, 50 years after Stonewall, the underground has emerged and center itself with impeccable aplomb.

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Over the past half-century, artists like Mariette Pathy Allen have been deep in the trenches, using their work to fight for dignity, respect, and rights — taking on the tyranny of ignorance, bigotry, and oppression.

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In celebration, The Museum of Sex presents Mariette Pathy Allen: Rites of Passage, 1978–2006, a stunning survey of the artist’s archive that includes photographs, interview transcripts, personal correspondence, and materials from her career working with trans, genderfluid, and intersex communities over the past four decades.

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Read the Full Story at Feature Shoot

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Sunday morning during a Drag Ball, 1984. © Mariette Pathy Allen, courtesy of the artist.

Harlem Drag Ball, 1984. © Mariette Pathy Allen, courtesy of the artist.

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Exhibitions, Feature Shoot, Photography

Tom Bianchi: 63 E. 9th Street. NYC Polaroids 1975–1983

Posted on May 15, 2019

untitled, nyc099 by Tom Bianchi

After discovering the Pines on Fire Island in 1972, Tom Bianchi found himself drawn into New York’s flourishing gay scene which emerged in the years following Stonewall.

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“I was having an affair with the playwright Edward Albee, which brought me in and out of New York,” Bianchi says from his home in Los Angeles. “I thought New York was too difficult a place to live – too expensive and too crazy – but my contacts lead me to imagine I could live there and be a New Yorker. What was thrilling was the sexual availability of the gay community at that time: we were just bursting at the seams.”

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In 1975, Bianchi moved to the heart of Greenwich Village and took a job as in-house counsel at Columbia Pictures. That year, Bianchi received a Polaroid SX-70 camera during a corporate conference and began documenting the lives of his friends and lovers in the early years of Gay Liberation – images which are now compiled in the new book, 63 E. 9th Street. NYC Polaroids 1975–1983.

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Read the Full Story at AnOther Man

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untitled, nyc079 by Tom Bianchi

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, AnOther Man, Art, Books, Manhattan, Photography

Thee Almighty & Insane: Chicago Gang Business Cards From the 1960s & 1970s

Posted on May 15, 2019

Brandon Johnson, Courtesy Almighty & Insane Books

Long before digital media took hold, people built their reputations through business cards. Offering the perfect balance of professionalism and panache, these cards communicated the holder’s identity to friends, associates, and enemies with bold, blackletter typefaces.

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On Chicago’s North and West Sides during the 1960s and 70s, business cards were one of the ultimate status symbols for gangs like the Royal Capris, the Almighty Playboys, and the Imperial Gangsters, who used these discreet slips of paper to rep their set.

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“The practice carried over from membership cards of social athletic clubs in Chicago that many gangs evolved from,” says Brandon Johnson, author of Thee Almighty & Insane: Chicago Gang Business Cards From the 1960s & 1970s – his second in-depth volume documenting the long-underground culture. “In my opinion, these cards offered the gangs a sense of validation as official organisations.”

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Read the Full Story st Huck Online

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Brandon Johnson, Courtesy Almighty & Insane Books

Brandon Johnson, Courtesy Almighty & Insane Books

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, Art, Books, Huck

Gustav Mesmer: Icarus of Lautertal

Posted on May 10, 2019

© Gustav Mesmer, courtesy of Edition Patrick Frey

The call to make art isn’t so much a choice as a force compelling creation, no matter the price. Few can resist the possibility that something lays beyond the sheer will it takes to render something out of nothing at all. For all that is given, the possibility of return is a draw: fame, wealth, and legacy.

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But for the outsider artist, the reward is the act itself, creating a cycle of momentum nothing short of phenomenal. For Gustav Mesmer, the “Icarus of Lautertal”, as he came to be called, art was a way the medium through which he could express and resolve the conflict of being on earth and off at the same time. And that was enough.

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Read the Full Story at Feature Shoot

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© Gustav Mesmer, courtesy of Edition Patrick Frey

© Gustav Mesmer, courtesy of Edition Patrick Frey

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Feature Shoot

Dawoud Bey X David Hammons

Posted on May 8, 2019

David Hammons in his Harlem Studio, 1984. Gelatin silver photograph (24”x20”) Photography Dawoud Bey / courtesy of Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago and Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco

The New York art world has long operated on heavily stratified lines, placing white men at the centre of commercial representation and institutional investment. For the better part of the 20th century, it marginalised or erased the work of anyone else, forcing artists outside those narrow demographic to fend for themselves – or infiltrate from within.

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Linda Goode Bryant decided to do just that when she opened Just Above Midtown (JAM) in the sweet centre of the city’s gallery district in 1974. Located at 50 West 57 Street, JAM was unlike anything that had come before – or since.

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JAM was dedicated to black artists exclusively when no one else was. Goode Bryant elevated black arts at the pinnacle of power and prestige by presenting the most innovative and unconventional conceptual work of the time. By showcasing the work of artists such as Dawoud Bey, David Hammons, Lorraine O’Grady, Howardena Pindell, Adrian Piper, Lorna Simpson, and Ming Smith, Goode Bryant created a space where a new generation of black artists could connect, commune, and collaborate.

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JAM exhibitions sharpened the cutting edge, pushing possibilities of art. For Greasy Bags and Barbecue Bones, his first solo show in 1975, David Hammons glued black hair to fat-drenched brown paper bags from a fried chicken spot, embracing the materials of black culture while simultaneously subverting the soulless commodification of art.

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It was everything for which JAM stood for. Liberated from the restraints of content and form, black artists could soar into the stratosphere, creating work that now, 45 years later, is being recognised in a special tribute Linda Goode Bryant’s JAM Gallery at Frieze New York, curated by Franklin Sirmans, director of the Pérez Art Museum Miami.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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David Hammons, Bliz-aard Ball Sale I, 1983. Archival pigment photograph (44”x33”) Photography Dawoud Bey / courtesy of Stephen Daiter Gallery, Chicago and Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Dazed, Exhibitions, Manhattan

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