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Posts from the “Photography” Category

Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985

Posted on September 28, 2017

Photo: Sandra Eleta (Panamanian, b. 1942), Edita (la del plumero), Panamá (Edita (the one with the duster), Panama), 1978-1979. Black and white photograph. 30 × 30 in. (76.2 × 76.2 cm)Courtesy of the artist. Artwork © the artist

“I don’t give a shit what the world thinks. I was born a bitch, I was born a painter, I was born fucked. But I was happy in my way. You did not understand what I am. I am love. I am pleasure, I am essence, I am an idiot, I am an alcoholic, I am tenacious. I am; simply I am,” Frida Kahlo wrote in a letter to her husband, artist Diego Rivera.

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The Mexican artist, who faithfully painted self-portraits throughout the course of her life, has become not only one the most famous artists in the world, but is very often the only Latin American women artist most people know by name. The invisibility of her comrades can be attributed to the power structures within the art world that disregarded the major contributions that women from 20 countries have been making to the art world throughout the twentieth century.

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Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985, a new exhibition on view at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, is a major step towards setting the record straight with more than 260 works by 116 women artists now on view through December 31, 2017. Curated by Dr. Cecilia Fajardo-Hill and Dr. Andrea Giunta, Radical Women is a watershed moment in the art world, illustrating the power of intersectionality in the new millennium.

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Six years in the making, Radical Women brings together women from across Central and South America, the Caribbean, and the United States, showcasing the works of pioneers making art on their own terms, including Brazilian art star Lygia Pape, who had a solo exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art earlier this year; visionary Venezuelan Pop artist Marisol, who died at the age of 83 in 2016; and the gender-bending self-portraiture of Cuban American performance artist Ana Mendieta, whose husband was found not guilty of her murder in 1985.

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The exhibition, which is accompanied by a catalogue of the same name, published by Prestel, is a brilliant introduction to both the artists and the issues they face as women in the Latin American diaspora, providing their own take on feminism, patriarchy, gender, sexuality, identity, and art history. We spotlight six artists you should know, who have inherited the mantle from the indomitable Frida Kahlo.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Photo: “Marcha gay (Gay pride march)”, 1984. Gelatin silver print. 11 × 14 in. (27.9 × 35.6 cm) Courtesy of Yolanda Andrade.

Photo: Paz Errázuriz (Chilean, b. 1944), La Palmera, from the series La manzana de Adán (Adam’s Apple), 1987. Digital archival pigment print on Canson platinum paper. 19 5/8 × 23 1/2 in. (49.8 × 59.7 cm)Courtesy of the artist and Galeria AFA, Santiago. Artwork © the artist.

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, Art, Books, Dazed, Exhibitions, Latin America, Photography, Women

Dasha Yastrebova: Welcome to the Moscow Underground

Posted on September 28, 2017

Photo: Dasha Yastrebova, Dancers in costume, 2007. Courtesy the artist

Photo: Dasha Yastrebova, Masha Galaxy, trash-character and performer, the star of all parties, and a legend in Moscow, 2007. Courtesy the artist

In 2007, when the Solyanka Club opened in Moscow, it was a time of great hope. The first generation of post-Soviet teenagers came of age in a moment when anything seemed possible, mostly because the government was willing to overlook many social and cultural activities. Solyanka, a restaurant during the day and a nightclub after dark, burst forth. It quickly became the home for an underground, bohemian community of artists, photographers, designers, musicians, performers, and filmmakers who embraced those whom the Russian government persecuted, specifically queer culture, drag queens, and people who identified as transgender. Even then, Solyanka was an island of tolerance in a country plagued by prejudice and persecution.

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At the age of eighteen, while shooting for magazines like Russian Vogue, Dasha Yastrebova started going to Solyanka. She photographed there for a year, and most of this work has never been seen before. Here, Yastrebova speaks about this intriguing moment in Russian history, a period of personal and creative freedom that has since disappeared.

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Read the Full Story at Aperture Online

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Photo: Dasha Yastrebova, Stylist Natasha Sych, 2007. Courtesy the artist.

Categories: Aperture, Art, Photography

The Artists Using Gender as a Tool and a Weapon

Posted on September 25, 2017

Photo: Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Darkroom Mirror (0X5A1531), 2017. Archival pigment print, 51 × 34 in (129.5 × 86.4 cm). Courtesy the artist and Yancey Richardson, New York

Beyond the binary lays a world of infinite possibility, a space of total freedom and fluidity. ‘Male’ and ‘female’ are the space where we begin, and when we liberate ourselves from the paradigm of ‘either/or’ a vast wealth of gender expression begins to reveal itself.

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Invariably, not everyone is comfortable within this extraordinary space. Many hold fast to simplistic, reductive thinking that diminishes the complexities and nuances of human experience and may resist enlightenment. Others understand the necessity of expansive and inclusive ideas, conversations and art – and it’s here that Trigger: Gender as a Tool and a Weapon takes off.

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Curated by Johanna Burton, Trigger is a major exhibition featuring the work of more than 40 artists from all walks of life, which will be on view at the New Museum, New York this month and catalogued in a book of the same name on November 21.

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By positioning gender at the intersection of race, class, sexuality and disability, Trigger exposes deep ambiguities, curious contradictions and fundamental questions at the heart of life on earth. The artists featured here offer ways to use gender to construct and dismantle culture, building new spaces and refurbishing the old. We speak with Burton about the importance of the show, and profile the work of six artists using gender as a weapon and a tool to embrace, reject and subvert the status quo.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Artwork: Tschabalala Self, “Loner”, 2016. Fabric, Flashe, and acrylic on canvas, 84 × 80 in (213.3 × 203.2 cm). Courtesy the artist and Thierry Goldberg, New York

Artwork: Justin Vivian Bond, “My Barbie Coloring Book”, 2014. Watercolour on archival paper, 14 ½ × 11 ½ in (36.8 × 29.2 cm). Courtesy the artist

Categories: Art, Dazed, Exhibitions, Painting, Photography

Welcome to the “Backyard Biennial”

Posted on September 22, 2017

Patrice Helmar, Dýrfinna

Welcome to the “Backyard Biennial,” which kicks off today, Friday, September 22 at 6:30 PM, a showcase of art, photography, and live events at the home of artist Patrice Helmar in Ridgewood, Queens. The Biennial runs on Saturday, September 23 from 12–6 PM; Sunday, September 24 from 12–8 PM; and Saturday, September 30 from 12–6:30 PM.

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Among the artists exhibited are faves Delphine Adama Fawundu, Yoav Horesh, and Thomas Roma — the Columbia University connection. Helmar speaks with us about her vision for the event, which is free and open to the public.

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Please talk about the inspiration for the Backyard Biennial. How did this idea come about?

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Patrice Helmar: This summer it was exciting, but also frustrating to see so many friends and colleagues posting their art travels. A common affectation was to extensively criticize work at various pavilions. I’m all for criticality but the mechanics of spectacle and spectator alike at such a grand monetary scale are hard to swallow.

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I spent part of the summer visiting my family and making work in Alaska. Before I headed north to buy the domain, Backyard Biennial. This felt like a small commitment to make a thing happen. What started as an inside joke became a serious curatorial endeavor as I reached out to various artists asking for their participation as early as May of this year.

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Ian​ ​Lewandowski, Alex,​ ​Lorenzo,​ ​Benji.

While Manhattan has gone completely corporate and Brooklyn is undergoing massive gentrification, the borough of Queens seems (from the outside at least) to retain the flavor of Old York. Could you speak about the significance of hosting the Backyard Biennial in Ridgewood?

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Patrice Helmar:. Ridgewood is where I currently work and live. I’m not a Native New Yorker, but I’ve heard from my friends who are about how much the city has changed. I’ve seen gentrification happen in the past five years that I’ve lived in the city, but I can’t imagine what it must feel like when it’s your own neighborhood.

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There are artists I know who live and work in the city that are like me. These artists work multiple jobs, live with roommates or their families, try to avoid marginalized roles in a small corner of the art world, and may work hard enough to have a studio. Often these artists are deeply in debt because of student loans, and may struggle to afford materials to produce their work.

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Having the Biennial in my backyard makes sense because it’s not an additional cost. It’s not a dedicated gallery space – commercial or otherwise, or part of an institutional framework. Another thing that has been interesting about putting the show together is having to consider that everyone who sees the Biennial will walk through my bedroom. It’s made me super conscious of my own living space, and feels very personal.

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Courtney​ ​Garvin, Box Braids

How did you decide which artists to feature in the show? What would you say are some of the defining characteristics and themes of the works featured in the show?

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Patrice Helmar: I’ve had a project for the past year called the Marble Hill Camera & Supper Club. It started when I lived in the Bronx and had a lot of space. There was a huge kitchen, and two parlor rooms. The house was a Victorian style home. Every month I’d invite four different artists, photographers, or writers to present their work via a slideshow. I’d cook a big dinner, and sometimes fifty or more people would show up. On average it would be about 20 to 25 people coming to spend the evening sharing work and hanging out.

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There are a group of artists in the show from my hometown in Alaska. I made a conscious decision to include their works because they make strong work that I admire, and it isn’t always the easiest thing to show when you live in an isolated part of the country.

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Also, I approached artists who are very well established. Some were unable to be in the exhibition, but two of my favorite artists, Thomas Roma and Tom Kalin were kind enough to agree to have works in the show. I’m very honored that their work is included.

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Why did you decide not to sell the works?

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Patrice Helmar: I don’t want the focus of the Backyard Biennial to be commercial. I want to people to hang out, and have art accessible and seen in a different kind of place.

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Sitting in my garden with a cup of coffee and looking at laundry across the skyline on clotheslines, hearing dogs barking and kids playing, and having my neighbor’s tomatoes creep across my fence as they ripen at the end of the summer makes me feel alright. There are a lot of things happening in the world that don’t make me feel alright.

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As excited as I am about sharing the Backyard Biennial, I’m really looking forward to spending that first morning alone with a backyard full of art I’ve handpicked, on a day when the show isn’t open to the public.

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Allin​ ​Skiba, Boys Don’t Cry

Categories: Art, Photography

Remembering Jean-Michel Basquiat

Posted on September 21, 2017

Photo:Jean-Michel Basquiat on set of Downtown 81, written by Glenn O’Brien, Directed by Edo Bertoglio, Produced by Maripol Photo By Edo Bertoglio© New York Beat Films LLC, by permission of the estate of Jean-Michel Basquiat all rights reserved

Jean-Michel Basquiat joined the 27 Club on August 12, 1988. He died young, at the height of his success, breaking through boundaries that had marginalised countless African-American artists from establishing their rightful place in museums, galleries, and history books. With the $110.5 million sale of his painting at auction earlier this year, Basquiat once again was established at the pinnacle of American art, with his work setting records and putting him in the company of Pablo Picasso and Francis Bacon.

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But who was the man behind the work, the Brooklyn native of Puerto Rican and Haitian lineage whose singular style set him apart and has influenced generations of artists worldwide since his death? As the Barbican opens Boom for Real – the first large-scale exhibition in the UK about the American artist – we speak with those who knew and worked with him over a period of ten years, to paint a portrait of the artist as a young man.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Jean-Michel Basquiat, 1982. A frame from the ART/new york video “Young Expressionists.”Credit Paul Tschinkel.

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Brooklyn, Dazed, Exhibitions, Graffiti, Manhattan, Painting, Photography

The 5 Art Shows You Need to See This Fall

Posted on September 19, 2017

Photo; Dawoud Bey. A Boy in Front of the Loew’s 125th Street Movie Theater 1976, Printed by 1979. Gelatin Silver print 230 x 150. Featured in “States of America: Photography from the Civil Rights Movement to the Reagan Era“

Philippe Halsman, A Paragon of Beauty, Dalí’s Moustache, 1953-54.
Vintage photomontage print. 35.3 x 23.5 cm. Philippe Halsman Archive, New York © Philippe Halsman Archive. From “Dali/Duchamp”

Fall is when everything begins, as the new season kicks into gear and people get in the swing of things. As your calendar fills up, there’s no better time to get away from it all and dip into a museum to catch an exhibition that will inspire the soul and inflame the mind. Crave spotlights five of the best new shows opening this season, each one a phenomenal collection of art and ideas.

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States of America: Photography from the Civil Rights Movement to the Reagan Era

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The history of the United States is a multifaceted mosaic of experiences, tiled together around a fragile center that exploded in civil war in the nation’s first hundred years. In its second century, it was rocked over and over again by peoples determined to live into the rights guaranteed under the Constitution against those who would deny them. From the 1960s through the 1980s, the nation faced some of its greatest challenges, from the Civil Rights Movement, which spawned the Women’s and Gay Liberation Movements, to the devastation of COINTELPRO and a government that willfully used illegal measures to destroy its people from within.

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Looking back at what was and the promises of what might have been, Nottingham Contemporary, UK, presents States of America: Photography from the Civil Rights Movement to the Reagan Era, a collections of 250 photographs by 16 American masters, now on view through November 26, 2017. Among the artists featured are Crave faves Diane Arbus, Dawoud Bey, Mark Cohen, Bruce Davidson, Louis Draper, William Eggleston, Lee Friedlander, Jim Goldberg, Danny Lyon, Mary Ellen Mark, Stephen Shore, and Garry Winogrand.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Head wrap interpreted for Items: Is Fashion Modern? by Omar Victor Diop. © 2017 Omar Victor Diop @africalive-production.com. Image courtesy The Museum of Modern Art, New York.

 

From Martin Wong: Human Instamatic

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Painting, Photography

Stephen Dupont: Piksa Niugini Portraits and Diaries

Posted on September 16, 2017

Photo: Sing-Sing Performers, Goroka Show, Eastern Highlands © Stephen Dupont

It is estimated that ancient inhabitants first migrated from Africa by way of Southeast Asia to Papua New Guinea (PNG) between 50,000-70,000 years. Around 7000 BC, agriculture developed in the highlands, making it one of the few areas in the world where people independently domesticated plants, and by 3000 BC, traders from Southeast Asia began to collect bird of paradise plumes native to the island.

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Sharing an island with Indonesia, PNG rests just TK miles from Australia. Home to 6.3 million people, PNG is considered one of the most culturally diverse countries in the world with 848 different languages listed for the country, of which 12 have no known living speakers. PNG is also one of the most rural counties, with only 18% of its population living in urban centers. Although the nation has the sixth fastest-growing economy in the world, as of 2011, at least one third of the population lives on less than $1.25USD per day.

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PNG is one of the world’s least explored countries, both geographically and culturally, making the work of Stephen Dupont even more salient and prescient in ways we cannot yet fully comprehend. His newest book, Piksa Niugini Portraits and Diaries (Radius Books/Peabody Museum Press) is a two-volume slipcased set that documents PNG’s most important cultural and historical zones: the Highlands, Sepik, Bougainville, and the capital city of Port Moresby.

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PNG is one of the world’s last frontiers, and Dupont’s photographs reveal a people and a place that is on the brink of detribalization. As Dupont notes, “I love this country. I didn’t think I ever would, but something here gets into your blood…. The Gardener Fellowship handed me the opportunity to take my camera, diaries, and sketchbooks into some very wild and remote places—a chance to do what I do best, be a nomad, a storyteller, and capture the beauty, mystery, and the trauma of this strange and epic land.”

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Photo; Sing-Sing Performers, Goroka Show, Eastern Highlands © Stephen Dupont

Indeed, epic is the perfect word to describe the world Dupont depicts, a world that dissolves at our fingertips. With each turn of the page we venture further inside a place that is unknown from the outside. These two volumes read as a visual poem of great depth and breadth, a poem of an ancient tradition that is spoken in languages entirely too original as to be understood upon a cursory glance. Each of Dupont’s photographs requires inner stillness and silence of the mind to absorb the brilliance of a nation that has maintained a distinct identity over millennia.

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The portraits, collected in a single volume, give us a look at the finished work as a cohesive whole, but it is the diaries that give us an understanding and a feeling for Dupont’s travels. We see his Moleskine notebook scanned with handwritten notes, his full contact sheets, newspaper stories, snapshots, aerial views, landscapes, all of which provide a larger context for the space the portraits occupy in the larger frame. Dupont’s typewritten journals, which appear at the end of the book, give us a means by which to situate his work. Too often we only see the finished work, never knowing the means to which the photographer had to achieve his goals. Dupont’s journals change this, and give us a greater understanding to the commitment he brings to documenting PNG.

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As he explains, “I’m no anthropologist or historian; my intentions are more personal, artistic, even experimental. Through my photography and in these books I hope to capture a passing footprint of society here, to highlight detribalization and the cultural changes taking place in Papua New Guinea in 2011. It’s not just art. It’s a piece of history—photographs, observations, notes, drawings, and reflections that offer an alternative window into on one of the most intriguing and inspiring places I have ever experienced.”

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First published at L’Oeil de la Photographie
April 1, 2014

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Photo: Sing-Sing Performers, Goroka Show, Eastern Highlands © Stephen Dupont

Categories: Art, Books, Photography

Richard Boch: The Mudd Club

Posted on September 15, 2017

Photo: Mudd Club Fashion Show, 1980. Photography Nick Taylor.

Photo: Jackie Curtis and Bowie. Photography Bobby Grossman.

The Mudd Club: the name alone embodies the mystical, mythical essence of Old York – a city where you could reinvent yourself from the ground up. All it took was ingenuity, desire, and nerve to do-it-yourself, take it to the streets and show out on the world stage.

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In the fall of 1978, the Mudd Club opened its doors at 77 White Street, long before anyone referred to the triangle below Canal as “Tribeca.” Back then it was an outpost on the frontier of downtown. As manufacturing shops packed up and left town, huge industrial buildings stood bare, attracting artists who transformed these commercial spaces into studios and homes. When they needed a break, they hit the Mudd, a tiny spot that became the ultimate nightclub, bringing together people from all walks of life.

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Here the No Wave rubbed shoulders with Hip Hop, while graffiti writers and post punk musicians filled the joint. Everyone from Halston, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and David Bowie to Nan Goldin, Lydia Lunch, and Dee Dee Ramone could be found in the mix. This is the place where Fab 5 Freddy taught Debbie Harry to rap and no one thought twice about a white woman dropping rhymes on the mic.

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From 1979 to 1983, the Mudd Club was the place to be, the ultimate scene for insiders and outsiders alike, a place where art, music, fashion, and culture completely reinvented itself with luminaries like trans model Teri Toye, drag legend Joey Arias, and performance artist Klaus Nomi sharpening the cutting edge. On any given night, something wild and wonderful was going down, whether it was a theme party like “Rock ‘n’ Roll Funeral Ball,” a reading by William S. Burroughs, or a live performance by Nico.

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For two years, at the Mudd Club’s height, Richard Boch manned the door, deciding who would make it past the legendary ropes and enter the delirious den of iniquity that embodied the downtown scene at its height. As a doorman, Boch played a critical role in casting the characters you would see inside, a glorious mélange of celebrities, local legends, and underground superstars. He has just released his memoir The Mudd Club (Feral House) and speaks with us about how to throw the hottest party in New York.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Photo: Ivy crash out at Mudd Club on the second floor, 1979. Photography Alan Kleinberg

 

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Books, Dazed, Fashion, Manhattan, Music, Photography

Stephen Barker: The ACT UP Portraits – Activists & Avatars, 1991–1994

Posted on September 15, 2017

Photo: Mark Harrington, copyright Stephen Barker

Halston. Robert Mapplethorpe. Keith Haring. Freddie Mercury. Eazy E. Antonio Lopez. Martin Wong. David Wojnarowicz. Herb Ritts. The list goes on – and on. More than 675,000 people have died of Aids-related illnesses since the epidemic first hit in 1981, devastating a generation coming-of-age in the wake of the gay, civil rights, and women’s liberation movements of the 1960s and 70s.

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Where it was once an all-consuming force decimating lives, survivors of the terror and trauma rarely revisit those horrific times. It is difficult to express the scale and scope of the agony of illness and the pain of death that happened day after day, year after year, for decades. Imagine a funeral for friends and family every week. Envision the fear spread by misinformation and ignorance, in the wake of a government that turned its back on the victims of the virus.

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During the first four years of the crisis, President Ronald Reagan never said a word about the disease, which had infected nearly 60,000 people – 28,000 of whom had died. In 1987, Senator Jesse Helms amended a federal bill to prohibit Aids education, saying such efforts “encourage or promote homosexual activity.”

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The battle lines were drawn: it was the people vs. the government.

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In 1987, ACT UP (Aids Coalition to Unleash Power) was formed in response. Organised as a leaderless network of committees working with affinity groups, members of ACT UP took it upon themselves to battle the disease and the government firsthand. Their slogan, “Silence = Death,” became the rallying cry for activists, who, to paraphrase poet Dylan Thomas, refused to go gently into the night. They raged until their actions turned the tide.

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ACT UP took on every aspect of the crisis, coming up with grassroots solutions to clearly defined problems. Photographer Stephen Barker worked as part of ACT UP’s Needle Exchange Program on New York’s Lower East Side. He also participated in the first “Funeral March,” one of the most powerful public protests against the regime, wherein Mark Fisher’s body was carried in an open coffin from Judson Memorial Church to the steps of the Republican National Committee on the eve of the 1992 presidential election.

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Barker’s photographs made during these actions, along with a selection from the “Nightswimming” series made in places where men regularly went for trysts, will be on view in the exhibition Stephen Barker: The ACT UP Portraits – Activists & Avatars, 1991–1994, at Daniel Cooney Fine Art, New York (September 14 – October 28, 2017). Below, he speaks with us about the lessons he learned in the fight for life and the war against death.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Photo; Funeral March, copyright Stephen Barker

Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Dazed, Manhattan, Photography

Tabitha Soren: Surface Tension

Posted on September 12, 2017

Copyright Tabitha Soren

Copyright Tabitha Soren

Though we may have the world at our fingertips, often the only thing we have to show for the minutes, hours, days gone by are a trail of greasy swipemarks left behind. Mindlessly, we wipe the evidence away and delve back in, sending and receiving photos, videos, and messages in a never-ending stream of digital consciousness.

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We rarely consider, let alone see, how these actions change the way we perceive reality. Former television journalist Tabitha Soren took notice of this phenomenon one day while on a plane, reading the manuscript for her husband’s latest book on her iPad. When she turned off the machine, she noticed these grimy finger trails all across the surface. She instinctively whipped out her phone to snap a quick photograph, entranced by the marks of where she had “been”.

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This single image became the catalyst for Surface Tension, a series of large-scale photographs that look at how we look, asking us to see beyond the appearance of things. Here, Soren saw an opportunity to reflect on the media we consume, transforming digital detritus into poetic, painterly images of images we might not otherwise see as art, such as America’s two greatest loves: cat videos and porn.

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Soren, who got her start appearing in the Beastie Boys’ landmark 1987 music video, “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party),” rose to fame as an anchor for MTV News, following Bill Clinton on the 1992 Presidential campaign trail, and interviewing controversial figures from Yasser Arafat to Anita Hill. After reaching the pinnacle of success, she decided to go behind the lens. Below, she speaks with us about the life on the other side of the camera.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed Digital

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Copyright Tabitha Soren

Categories: Art, Dazed, Photography

Jeanine Michna-Bales: Through Darkness to Light – Photographs Along the Underground Railroad

Posted on September 6, 2017

Stopover. Frogmore Plantation, Concordia Parish, Louisiana, 2014

Last Fall, I found myself sitting alone in a private coach driving along a quiet road through Fort Myers, Florida. It was late in the evening, and the sky had gone dark. There were no buildings, no traffic, and very few street lights as the coach drove along through the backwoods and deep thickets of the town. I gazed out the window and was suddenly a vision called from somewhere deep within the land overcame me. I shuddered but couldn’t unsee the invisible traces of history.

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I keep these things to myself. Most people are not trying to hear messages without “evidence,” and even then… Shadowboxing with lies is a losing proposition and I quit that game. I simply see who said what now, flag, and keep it moving.

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But when I came across Jeanine Michna-Bales’ photographs, Through Darkness to Light: Photographs Along the Underground Railroad, the vision came tumbling back. The photographs, published in a book from Princeton Architectural Press, are currently on view at the Wyandotte County Historical Museum in Bonner Springs, Kansas, and will be traveling around the nation through 2020.

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Resting Place. Church Hill, Mississippi, 2015

On the Way to the Hicklin House Station. San Jacinto, Indiana, 2013

Fifteen years ago, Michna-Bales received the message and began to see, imagining in her mind’s eye what the journey along the Underground Railroad looked like to those who made the trip. She began to do the work, researching the details of the routes, scouting locations by day, and then, finally photographing them at night.

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For the project, she traced a route from the cotton plantations of central Louisiana through the cypress swamps of Mississippi, across the plains of Indiana, and north to Canada, traveling nearly 1,400 miles to freedom. Michna-Bales shows us the American countryside as was then, as it is now, and in doing so, she reveals that time itself is an illusion. As William Faulkner understood, “The past is never dead. It is not even past.”

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Michna-Bales’ photographs are haunting elegies to the horrors that hide in plain sight, histories of trauma and exploitation that only the spiritually corrupt can ignore and the intellectually dishonest can diminish or deny. Her work operates on several levels at the same time. In the darkness there is cover, but there is also constant threat, where innocence and serenity lies alongside four centuries of brutality and genocide. There is heroism and bravery, courage and nobility—as well as the very real awareness that the greatest threat to this nation is homegrown, that the real terrorists pledge allegiance to the flag and will do its bidding without conscience or soul.

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Moonlight Over the Mississippi. Tensas Parish, Louisiana, 2014

Look for the Gray Barn Out Back. Joshua Eliason Jr. barnyards and farmhouse, with a tunnel leading underneath the road to another station, Centerville, Indiana, 2013

Michna-Bales’ photographs are the embodiment of W.E.B. DuBois’ double consciousness: of you can only see a lyrical landscape, you do not know the truth about America. If you cannot feel the curious combination of fear and valor, you might be out of touch with the history of the nation and the debt it has yet to pay.

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Through Darkness to Light is one of the most searing bodies of work made in recent years, eloquent in its ability to capture all that no longer has body or voice but blows through the air far and wide, always present even if you refuse to look.

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I looked at my hands to see if I was the same person now I was free.
There was such a glory over everything,
the sun came like gold through the trees, and over the fields,
and I felt like I was in heaven.
—Harriet Tubman

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Within Reach. Crossing the St. Clair River to Canada just south of Port Huron, Michigan, 2014

All photos © Jeanine Michna-Bales.

Categories: Art, Books, Photography

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