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Posts from the “Art” Category

Richard Davis: Tales From The Second Cities Birmingham 1985–1988

Posted on November 12, 2020

Richard Davis

In 1984, at the age of 18, Richard Davis left home and moved into a shared house in the Moseley District of Birmingham. “It felt a good fit for me – alternative, full of young people and open-minded,” he says.

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“I remember someone in the house telling me about a centre for the unemployed run by the Birmingham Trades Council, which was located within walking distance of our house in Sparkhill – an inner-city neighbourhood with a large Asian and Irish population.”

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At the centre, Davis discovered a darkroom and making photographs, an expensive practice made possible by the generous supply of free film, paper, and chemicals. “Its staff offered nothing but encouragement and support. They would often send me out onto the streets of Birmingham armed with a camera and tell me not to come back until I had a decent set of photos,” he says. 

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Richard Davis
Categories: 1980s, Art, Books, Huck, Photography

Akeem Smith: No Gyal Can Test

Posted on November 12, 2020

Courtesy of Akeem Smith

Dancehall emerged in Jamaica in the late 1970s, as a new generation forged an indigenous national identity coming of age in the years following independence from the UK. Embracing the already well-established tradition of sound system culture, the movement made itself known at local gatherings around Kingston, quickly radiating across the Caribbean diaspora. 

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Growing up between Kingston and Brooklyn, Section 8 fashion designer, stylist, and artist Akeem Smith, 29, became heavily involved in the dancehall scene. His aunt Paula and grandmother co-founded the Ouch Collective – a niche fashion house that created iconic outfits for the dancers. 

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Over the past 12 years, Smith began creating an extensive archive of artifacts chronicling the 1990s dancehall scene that forms the basis for the new exhibition, No Gyal Can Test. Smith weaves together scenes from the era in a multi-disciplinary show that combines photography, video, ephemera, sculpture, fashion, and audio components to evoke the extraordinary creative spirit of dancehall. 

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Courtesy of Akeem Smith
Categories: 1990s, Art, Exhibitions, Huck, Music, Photography, Women

Magnum Photographer Bruno Barbey Dies at 79

Posted on November 10, 2020

FRANCE. Paris. French photographer, Bruno BARBEY. 1967.  © Bruno Barbey / Magnum Photos

Bruno Barbey (1941 – 2020), who died on this Monday November 9, was a citizen of the world, dedicating his life to documenting conflict and celebrating beauty with sensitivity and understanding. The Moroccan-born photographer of French and Swiss nationality studied photography and graphic arts at the École des Arts et Métiers in Vevey, Switzerland, before embarking on his first major project, The Italians (1961-1964), a career-defining series inspired by Robert Frank’s landmark monograph, The Americans.

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With the understanding that “photography is the only language that can be understood anywhere in the world,” Barbey began his relationship with Magnum Photos in 1964, becoming an associate member in 1966 and a full member in 1968, before serving as Magnum Vice President for Europe in 1978-79 and President of Magnum International from 1992-1995. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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FRANCE. Paris. 5th arrondissement. Students in a chain passing cobble stones for the barricades, Gay Lussac Street. May 10th 1968.  © Bruno Barbey / Magnum Photos
Categories: Art, Blind, Photography

A Brief Story of Homoerotic Photography in America, Part II

Posted on November 10, 2020

Kenta © Andrew Kung

As the 1960s took shape, the polished veneer of polite society was stripped away and in its place came a new generation of Americans demanding the same Constitutional rights afforded to straight white men since the nation began. The Civil Rights Movement, the Sexual Revolution, and Second-wave feminism transformed the political and cultural landscape, setting the stage for the the birth of the Gay Liberation Movement. 

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On June 28, 1969 at the Stonewall Inn, Black and Latinx transgender people took a stand against state-sponsored violence, leading a five-day rebellion against the New York Police Department that begat a global movement for LGBTQ rights. Once the proverbial closet doors were torn off the hinge, there was no turning back. For one brief shining decade, the future was bright. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Tony Ward in String Bondage, 1996 © Rick Castro
“Prince” , 2019, Archival Inkjet Print on Canson Infinity Platine, 30 x 36 in, courtesy of Shikeith
Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Blind, Photography

Martine Barrat: Harlem in the 1970s and 1980s

Posted on November 10, 2020

Martyine Barrat. Mabel Albert (Harlem), 1982.

Hailing from France, Martine Barrat got her start as a dancer working with Pink Floyd and Soft Machine. After travelling to Edinburgh for the International Dance Festival, she met Ellen Stewarr – director of La MaMa Experimental Theater on New York’s Lower East Side.  

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“She offered me a ticket to come to the city, with my son, to dance with her company,” Barrat recalls. In June 1968, she arrived and made the city her home, settling into Harlem before moving to the South Bronx during the height of white flight.

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With a group of jazz musicians, Barrat co-created the Human Arts Ensemble – a collective working with children staging street performances and running video and music workshops.

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“I wasn’t trying to be a photographer,” Barrat says. “Two incredible philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari gave me a video camera saying we should document the events we were creating at La Mama every day with the kids from all over the city. This, I loved.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Martine Barrat. Love on her way to the Rhythm Club (Harlem), 1993.
Martine Barrat. Eric Williams, the dominoes champion (Harlem), 1983.
Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Exhibitions, Manhattan, Photography

Susan Meiselas: Tar Beach: Life on Rooftops of Little Italy 1920-1975

Posted on November 6, 2020

Mildred Musillo, 197 Hester Street, Summer 1940.

Even when the city is impoverished, real estate in New York is at a premium simply because living stacked one on top of the other in apartments with the feel of a cozy shoebox lends itself visionary appropriation of one’s greater environment. The lack of public spaces, courtyards, and plazas have driven New Yorkers to new heights of creativity, perhaps none quite as ingenious as “tar beach,” building rooftops reimagined as semi-private playgrounds.

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The ultimate escape — without leaving home — tar beach offers city dwellers the space to feel like they are king of the world as they survey the jagged landscape from new heights, their views unimpeded by buildings blotting out the sun. The indelible sensation of being transported to a veritable mountaintop does marvelous things to one’s mind, opening a magical portal into a world where anything is possible. For over a century, it has been common practice for residents to don their finest threads, ascend to the top of a six-floor walk up, and make vernacular portraits. 

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 “Do people still go up to the roof? And if they do, what do they see? Because we saw heaven,” Martin Scorsese writes in the introduction to Tar Beach: Life on Rooftops of Little Italy 1920-1975 (Damiani). Magnum Photos member Susan Meiselas collaborated with Virginia Bynum and Angel Marinaccio, natives of Manhattan’s famed Little Italy to create a family photo album-style volume filled with photographs taken on neighborhood rooftops between the 1920s and early 1970s. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Peter and Michael Cirelli (aka ‘My Dee’), 242 Mulberry Street, c. 1920.
Categories: Art, Blind, Books, Manhattan, Photography

Diana Markosian: Santa Barbara

Posted on November 5, 2020

Diana Markosian

On January 2, 1993, Santa Barbara became the first American television show to air in Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The beloved 1980s soap opera chronicling the lives of the wealthy Capwell clan of Southern California became a sparkling image of the American Dream, captivating a nation just liberated from the yoke of a communist regime.

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Born in Moscow in 1989 – the year the Berlin Wall fell and the Eastern Bloc began to crumble to dust – photographer Diana Markosian grew up idolising Santa Barbara. “It was a window to another life that didn’t belong to us,” she says. 

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“We had nothing as a family. My brother and I were picking bottles to buy bread for my mom. Both my parents had PhDs, but couldn’t get work. My father was painting nesting dolls for tourists on the Red Square. They were reduced to nothing and they weren’t the only ones.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Diana Markosian
Diana Markosian
Categories: 1990s, Art, Books, Huck, Photography

Steve Eichner: In the Limelight – The Visual Ecstasy of NYC Nightlife in the 90s,

Posted on November 3, 2020

Grace Jones at Palladium, 1992 © 2020 Steve Eichner

The 1990s were the last hurrah of bohemian New York. The decade kicked off with thehighest murder rate in city history, while the draconian Rockefeller drug laws disappeared a generation of Black and Latinx youth, and the AIDS crisis continued unabated. It had been more than a decade since the federal government left the city for dead — but from the ashes of destruction the phoenix that is New York would rise once again.

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“Necessity is the mother of invention,” philosopher Plato sagely opined, understanding nature abhors a vacuum, as does the human mind. New Yorkers have long applied the wisdom of classical antiquity without giving it a second thought; the nature of survival demands innovative solutions to keep us afloat. As Generation X came of age, they broke all the rules, reveling in a dizzying mix of sin, spectacle, and self-expression that percolated in the non-stop extravaganza of the ‘90s New York nightlife scene.

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Here, a new group of upstarts of all races, ethnicities, genders, sexualities, and economic backgrounds came together on the dance floor in a celebration of PLUR (peace, love, unity, and respect) to dance until the break of dawn. Music was the draw — house, hip hop, techno, industrial, goth, drum and bass, grunge, and just about any other permutation of the underground sound drew an inexhaustible mix of partygoers dressed to impress. On any given night, one could party alongside celebrities, club kids, drag queens, ravers, hip hop heads, models, banjees, body boys, bondage slaves, Wall Street suits, and the bridge-and-tunnel set at legendary nightclubs like Tunnel, Roxy, Palladium, Club Expo, and Webster Hall.

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Susanne Bartsch (center) at the Palladium, 1995 © 2020 Steve Eichner
The Palladium, 1995 © 2020 Steve Eichner
Categories: 1990s, Art, Blind, Books, Manhattan, Music, Photography

Honky Tonk: Portraits of Country Music 1972-1981 – Photographs by Henry Horenstein

Posted on October 30, 2020

Lovers, Tootsie’s Orchid Lounge, Nashville, TN, 1975 © Courtesy of Henry Horenstein
Ponderosa, Near Pikesville, KY, 1974 © Courtesy of Henry Horenstein

In the 1970s, country music reached stratospheric heights by seamlessly weaving itself into the fabric of American culture by blending elements of folk and rock music into its Southern honky-tonk roots. Songs of love and loss, booze and gambling, family and country — the triumphs and struggles of everyday folks trying to make it through life — fueled a new generation of artists who reveled in a compelling mix of nostalgia, heartbreak, and pride. 

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The ‘70s brought talents like Loretta Lynn, Tammy Wynette, Reba McEntire, and Emmylou Harris into the ranks, their raw talent and star power shining alongside luminaries like Johnny Cash, Conway Twitty, John Denver, and Charley Pride. Throughout the decade, country music could be heard on popular television shows like Hee Haw as well as on local radio from coast to coast, the stars of the Grand Ole Opry were seen as national icons — with breakout performers like Dolly Parton, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, and Marie Osmond going Hollywood. 

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Photographer Henry Horenstein, a dyed in the wool Yankee, began photographing the country music scene as part of a final assignment for his history professor, the famed British writer and socialist E.P. Thompson, who helped Horenstein understand the importance of recording, studying, and documenting the people who were going to disappear from history unless someone preserved their role in it. He did just that, amassing an extraordinary archive of the images now on view in the new exhibition,Honky Tonk: Portraits of Country Music 1972-1981 – Photographs by Henry Horenstein.

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Dolly Parton, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA, 1972 © Courtesy of Henry Horenstein
Drunk Dancers, Merchant’s Cafe, Nashville, TN, 1974 © Courtesy of Henry Horenstein
Categories: 1970s, Art, Blind, Exhibitions, Music, Photography

Earlie Hudnall Jr.: Past and Present

Posted on October 29, 2020

Earlie Hudnall, Jr., Hot Summer Days, 2011, Courtesy PDNB Gallery, Dallas, TX

Growing up in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, during Jim Crow, Earlie Hudnall Jr. discovered the importance of photography, keeping records, and documenting family and community through his grandmother Bonnie Jean. 

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“My grandmother was like the community historian in her own way,” Hudnall says. “In the summertime, we would sit on the porch. She would be telling stories so vivid your imagination almost came to life.”

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Bonnie Jean kept albums that Hudnall would peruse, filled with photographs of community residents, primary school kids who grew up in the neighborhood, alongside family photos and works by her son Earlie Hudnall Sr. – an amateur photographer who made pictures while serving in the military. 

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Bonnie Jean impressed upon her grandson the importance of being aware of what was happening in the community. Hudnall recalls his family telling him about the lynching of Emmett Till, and stumbling upon newspaper clippings reporting an African American pilot shot down in the Korean War. Hudnall has kept them to this very day.

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Earlie Hudnall, Jr., June 19, 1987, Courtesy PDNB Gallery, Dallas, TX
Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Exhibitions, Huck, Photography

Jake Scharbach: Art at the End of Empire

Posted on October 28, 2020

Jake Scharbach

After empire peaks, it begins its descent, deftly illustrating the principle of Newton’s Third Law: for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. It is this very reversal that makes it so difficult to grasp when one is witnessing it from the inside looking out rather than they other way around. 

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It is here in the fog of chaos that artists may act as guides. Their intuitive need to explore and express that which is a blessing and a curse illuminates the darkness that obfuscates our view. Once rendered, their work provides both context and subtext that we may use to chart our path into the unknown by providing us a quiet space to contemplate how the present has come to pass. 

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Growing up in a small town in Washington, American artist Jake Scharbach developed an early connection to nature that informed his ongoing suspicions of civilization, one that has served him well in his quest to wrestle with the ineffable and give it voice. Coupled with an intimate experience of community and unconditional relationships, Scharbach cultivates a language of symbols and signs rooted in Western ideals to analyze contemporary cultural values. 

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Read the Full Story at Jacques Marie Mage

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Jake Scharbach
Categories: Art, Jacques Marie Mage

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