In A Different Light - Gallery Guide
In A Different Light - Gallery Guide
In a
Different Light
Gallery Guide
Galleries 1,2 and 6
Introduction
Copyright 1995 The Regents of the University of Co&fornia. All rights reserved.
In a Different Light explores the resonance of gay and lesbian experience in twentieth-century American art, focussing primarily on works made during the past thirty years. Rather than isolate the contributions of gay, lesbian, and queer artists, this exhibition examines their work in a broad social and cultural context. Coorganized by Lawrence Rinder, UAM/PFA Curator for Twentieth-Century Art, and Nayland Blake, a practicing artist, this exhibition incoporates some of the playfulness, associativeness, and aesthetic concern that one might usually expect more in a work of art than in a museum exhibition. The exhibition highlights, in particular, the dynamism and innovation in the work of the contemporary generation of young gay and lesbian artists, many ofwhom self-identifY as queer. Not only has there been, in these communities, an outpouring of work in the visual arts, but, especially in San Francisco, there is a palpable sense of community: visual artists, playwrights, poets, performance artists, film-makers, and video artists present their work together in a variety of non-profit venues, work that is often itself inter-disciplinary and collaborative. Remarkably, these artists, living in a generally hostile social climate-amid the constant threat of "gay-bashings," proscriptive legislative initiatives, and surrounded by the tragedy of AIDS--not only persist in making art, but do so in a spirit of humor, generosity, and flamboyance. Much of this work, too, has less to do with representing gay and lesbian lives than with conveying gay and lesbian views of the world: it is outward-looking, gregarious, and concerned. These young artists present vital messages of rage, survival, hope, pleasure, and compassion. While focussing primarily on the work of contemporary artists, In a Different Light takes a broad, cross-generational view in order to suggest an historical context for the work of this younger generation. In a Different Light is organized in a series of nine groups of objects and images, including works of art as well as items of popular culture such as posters, album covers, 'zines, etc. The nine groups are: "Void," "Self," "Drag," "Other,"
"Couple,""Family,""Orgy,""World,"and"Utopia." The works in each group, which are drawn from a variery of historical periods, are juxtaposed to create provocative, poetic constellations of meaning. The order of the groups suggests a kind of mathematical progression from zero (Void), to one (Self), to two (Couple), to many (Family, Orgy), to infinity (Utopia) and expresses an experience of moving toward ever greater degrees of sociability. On the one hand, this trajectory suggests the historical development of the gay and lesbian communities from a condition of invisibility and isolation, through a developing sense of community, to the present condition of increasing integration. On the other hand, the progress of the groups can be read as the personal passage from alienation to acceptance that faces any gay man or lesbian. It is hoped that the themes of the groups are, at the same time, universal enough to be accessible to a broad audience, straight as well as homosexual. In a Different Light includes both homosexual and non-homosexual artists, and we have left the sexual orientation of the artists unspecified in the exhibition. Some historical conditions pertain primarily to the lives of self-identified-whether closeted or not-homosexuals (i.e. social and legal oppression), but creative response to such conditions are not limited to those so affected. A straight artist may identifY with any one of numerous conditions-sexual or otherwise--central to the experience ofgay men or lesbians. He or she may create a work of art that contributes to the cultural dialogue ofboth the gay and lesbian communities and of the culture as a whole. If there are such things that can be called gay or lesbian sensibilities-aesthetic or otherwise-these are fluid phenomena within American culture and are not attached exclusively to people who have sex with people of the same sex. Furthermore, gay and lesbian artists do not look exclusively at the work of other homosexuals: to understand the influences upon their work, it must be seen in a broader social and aesthetic context. In a Different Light opens the door to a fascinating new area for exploration. The reso-
nance of gay and lesbian experience in twentieth-century American art has been profound in ways we are just beginning to realize. At the same time, it seems that the work of many of the younger generation of artists is telling us that our definitions ofsexual identity are changing in unforeseen ways. Now may be the right time to reflect on our collective history while we still have one foot planted in "gay," "lesbian," and "straight" experience and the other stepping into a new world whose definitions are, as yet, unknown.
In a Different Ught is supported in part by the generosity of Alvin H. Baum, Jr.,LCSW; the California Tamarack Foundation; Penelope M. Cooper; David Geffen; and anonymous donors.
Other important contributors are A Different Light bookstore,Architects and Heroes,Atthowe fine Art Services, Denise Beirnes, Karen and Clyde Beswick, Carole Berg, John Bransten, Rena Bransten, Marion Brenner and Robert Harshorn Shimshack, Mrs. Lewis Callaghan, Jeffrey Fraenkel and Alan Mark, Mimi and Peter Haas, James C. Harmel and Larry Dean Soule, Ayse and Robert Kenmore, Anne MacDonald, Elaine McKeon, Celeste and Tony Meier, Byron Meyer, Eileen and Peter Z. Michael, Penny and Noel Nellis, Out Magazine, Park Hyatt San Francisco, Paul Pendergast,]ane Restaino, Sharon and Barclay Simpson, Stolichnaya Vodka and Bombay Gin, Earlene and John Taylor, Paul Templeton, Top Copy, The Steam Works, and an anonymous donor.
This Shared Voices project is made possible through the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund Museum Collections Accessibility Initiative.
Gallery 1
Void
Frequently monochromatic, often verging on abstraction, the works in this group suggest blankness, absence, and loss. While much of this work relates to the tragedy of the AIDS epidemic, other pieces, such as Andy Warhol's jackie or Peter Hujar's Candy Darling, indicate previous or related expressions of mourning, absence, and alienation in order to place artists' response to AIDS in a broader context. A number of works in this section, such as David Tudor's reconstruction of John Cage's score for 4 Minutes, 33 Seconds, also suggest the emptiness ofwhat might becalleda state of"prebeing" that preceeds the birth of a new identity. Seen negatively, such works evoke the repressive alienation ofthe" closet." Seen in a more positive light, they represent a blank slate of unlimited possibility. The void can rebuff us as in Zoe Leonard's aerial photograph of Washington, D.C.. Leonard's photographs often play on the profoundly threatening inertness of the captured image. This is a Capitol that we can see but that we cannot find a place within. It's surface complication hides a profound blankness. Similarly, Peter Nagy's Internal Erotic balances between complexity and emptiness. While its title may seem to refer to sexuality, Nagy's painting actually addresses illness as part of a critique of consumer society. Nagy produces an image of viral malignancy by fusing coporate logos into flowers of evil-a swirling, malignant mass of confusing information and desires. Nagy's work is profoundly skeptical of the ability of imagery to operate sincerely. In this group, one finds a variety of formal approaches to the task of expressing alienation. Judy Chicago's drawing from the Rejection Quintet documents a moment of personal and professional loss. Her trademark centralized composition and floral/vaginal imagery serve as a vehicle for expressing grief and distress rather than the wholeness and celebration her work is usually known for. Chicago's 1974 work epito-
mizes the formal language of its time with its solid frontality, underlying grid structure and cool execution; but it is also reaching out historically to evoke the work of other artists, notably O'Keeffe and Kahlo. Her grief is thus connected by means ofa formal device with the struggles of other women. Indeed, Chicago's work has become emblematic of much of the women's art movement. Chicago's associative chain of Center-VaginaFlower has been echoed recently in the work of a number of gay men who have replaced the vagina with the anus. In this context, Brett Reichman's painting, Blind Spot, confronts the viewer with multiple readings. It is an anus that shines seductively like the sun, a floral mirror that reflects, offering the viewers themselves. But this mirror is blank, the viewer has been erased. Reichman refers to Chicago to make this point: the anus is the vagina for gay men, it is their "flower", but one that harbors the possibility of annihilation rather than birth. This ambivalent reaction to the anus as both a source of pleasure and source of disease, death, and loss, has colored much of our society's reaction to the AIDS epidemic. Ree Morton's Fading Flowers shares with Chicago's work the aim of recovering a lost mode of address. In Morton's case it is the nineteenthcentury language of sentiment. Her work's tone is deliberately conversational, disarming in its modesty but earnest about evoking sensations of passing time and death. Morton's art reveals the serious under-currents of funky domestic decoration. Her renewed attention to emotional content was part of women's efforts in the 1970s to forge an art that spoke more directly than Minimalism to the issues of their lives. This work, in turn, informed gay men's attempts to find a language appropriate to describing the mournful emptiness left in the wake of AIDS. The most dramatic example of this is the work ofRoss Blecknerwhose inky heavens, flickering birds, and funerary urns have all caught the emotional devestation of the epidemic. His urn paintings were some of the first art works to refer explicitly to the enormous numbers of those being lost. Like Bleckner, Judie Bamber and
Michael Jenkins have developed personal iconographies to describe emotional states. Jenkins' white felt dots refer both to snow and to the lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma. They form a freezing blizzard of infection in contrast to the comforting woolen blankets they rest on. Judie Bamber dispassionately isolates individual objects on grounds of seductive color. Her works might seem at first glance to reside firmly in the Chicago tradition of intense, centralized imagery, but the fierceness of Bamber's regard for these objects strips them of sentimentality.
1. David Tudor
Reconstructed score from John Cage's 4 minutes, 33 seconds, 1989 Document
2. Rudy Lemcke
Untitled (performance score for percussion), 1977 Graphite, china marker on paper
3. Collier Schorr
The Well #1 (White), 1948-1991 Plaster of Paris, cotton, graphite, ink
4. Andy Warhol
Jackie, 1964 Acrylic on canvas
5. Ross Bleckner
Untitled, 1989 Oil and watercolor on canvas
6. Michael Jenkins
Snowj7akes,about1990 Felt in plexiglass and frames
7. Judie Bamber
The Bad Seed (Canned Raspberry), 1986 Oil on canvas
Self
This group is composed largely of images of the body: skin, hair, and the contours of physical form. These works appear to turn inward rather than out towards to the world around them, evoking a sense of alienation as well as selfsufficiency. In these self-reflexive states, fantasies of identity can begin to take shape. Harmony Hammond's Flesh journals and Eva
8. Judy Chicago
Female Rejection Drawing from the Rejection Quintet, 1974 Prismacolor on rag paper
Hesse's Test Piece both treat latex as a stand in for human skin. Hesse is searching within form for gender, but her alert manipulations also evoke the body in its various activities. Hammond is more directly concerned with skin as surface, a page that can be inscribed by experience. Such inscription takes place literally on the artist's skin in Catherine Opie's Self-portrait. Opie's wounding can also be seen as part of a tribal identification, since the lines scored into her OOc:kdescribeafuntasysceneofsuburbanlesbianbliss. The wounded self can also construct armor, as in the work of Nancy Grossman or Scott Hewicker. Hewicker's mute polyester bundle echoes Grossman's elegantly defended Head. Both works evoke the shadow of abuse with differing strategies for coping with it. Wounding can also be deliberate, self-imposed, and symbolic as in Frida Kahlo's Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair. Kahlo, with her insistent interminglings ofmundane and fantasy experienceas well as her ability to transform personal tragedy and limitation into aesthetic powerhas become one of the most influential artists of the past thirty years, providing the inspiration and emotional tone for much feminist, diary, and body art. In this painting Kahlo's closely cropped hair and her defiant wearing of her lover Diego Rivera's suit point to the notion ofgender as a self-defined reality. The destabalizing of gender is one of the things about homosexuality that provokes great anxiety on the part of the straight world. Another is the notion of the queer as somehow selfpleasuring and self-sufficient. Both Laura Aguilar's In Sandy's Room and Robert Mapplethorpe's Self-Portrait with Whip are images of queers who are powerfully self-contained. By being self-sufficient-by having no need of an opposite-the people in these photographs exhibit a sense of eroticism free from a functional notion of sexuality.
35. Morrissey
Viva Hate, 1988 Album Cover
36. Phranc
Folksinger, 1985 Album cover
Drag
This group concerns the practice of imitation, and therefore indicates a shifting attention from self to other. Some of the works in this group, such as General Idea's Artist's Conception: Miss Genera/Idea, Robert Morris' poster for "Voice," Lynda Benglis' ad for "Artforum," or Chris Makos' photographs of Andy Warhol wearing make-up and women's wigs, represent drag in the conventional sense as a kind of playful cosruming in which gender is exaggerated or reversed. Often, the fluidity of gender identification is staged for the camera, perhaps out of a desire to trick the medium best known for its ability to capture the "real". While many artists in the late sixties and early seventies made works that incorporate the methods of drag, they typically used those methods to question indentity, not sexual preference. Indeed, cross-dressing is
often presented in such a way as to demonstrate the impossibility ofgenuinely changing gender. Vito Acconci's Conversiom #3 is a case in point. Lke much of the artist's work from this period (around 1971 ), the piece hinges on our ability to appreciate Acconci's actions as sincere attempts but also as failures. Whether he is attempting to sing a blues song "just like the record," construct a masturbatory fanstasy about the veiwer walking above him on a ramp, or--as here-transform himself into a woman, Acconci is presenting gaps that in reality can never be bridged, no matter how much they can be narrowed. For other artists, drag is shifted from being the subject of the image to being the method of image-making. Instead ofsimply representing a parody of gender norms, these artists create works that also question the sincerity or "naturalness" of the art object itsel For example, Robert Gober's Plywood--a finely crafted, handmade imitation ofan industrially produced building material-functions both in the tradition of trompe I'oeil painting-in which artists attempted to paint so realistically as to "fool the eye"while also suggesting an attempt literally to fabricate an experience of masculinity. Another artist whose work incorporates the notion of drag "realness"-the ability to "pass"-is Deborah Kass. Kass inhabits Andy Warhol's persona like the Drag King Elvis Herselvis. She takes Warhol's star-struck manner and uses it to express new areas ofmarginality. Warhol's Catholic veneration for the bereaved Jackie Kennedy, is replayed as Jewish veneration of, and lesbian desire for, Barbra Streisand. In another twist, Kass has remade, in her own image, one of Makos' drag photos of Andy Warhol, an image which was itself based on Man Ray's much earlier photograph ofthe artist Marcel Duchamp in the female guise ofRrose Selavy.
Angel or Marsden Hartley's Cascade of Devotion: Mexico, present a singular and monumental object or image which, in its isolated glory suggests something perfect and unattainable. Fetish-like works, such as Karen Kilimnick's
Madonna Before She Got Famous - Madonna at Home or Richard Hawkin's Goethe's Italian journey, capture the other with just ephemeral suggestions of their presence. Connie Samaras' photo portrait of an alien "visitor" makes explicit the ways that queer desire for the other can assume proportions that extend beyond gender itself. In many ways, the lesbian and gay fascination with science fiction and alien life is related to the desire for a third gender, neither male nor female. For much ofhis career, for example, David Bowie presented himself as just such a dually sexed alien, an identification that allowed him to play queer whether or not he was playing gay.
Gallery 2
Other
In this group, artists look outside of themselves to engage with a beloved, an object of intense desire or even worship. Often this longing is unrequited and the objects remain alluring yet perpetually distant. Whether the other is a star like Madonna, a fashion model, or an image of erotic perfection, such attraction must bridge a social chasm that would be difficult for anyone to cross but which is made especially impassable fur homosexuals becauseofproscriptions against same-sex eroticism. Precisely because of these proscriptions, unrequited love has, since the nineteenth century, been enshrined as the token form of acceptable homosexual desire. The desire, anticipation, and fear we encounter when we imagine the other is powerfully evoked in the works in this section by Romaine Brooks, Donald Moffett, and Joel Otterson. Brooks' Peter, a Young English Girl is an image of extraordinary glamour, a painting whose silvery palette and sinuous lines present an image of a women who combines coolness, swagger, and all the self-possession of a contempomry rock star. Donald Moffett's You, You, You employs the seductive technologies of advertising to express ravenous attraction. In his B()Wie Knife Bat, Joel Otterson erects a monument to masculinity tinged with both danger and humor. In this section, desire for the other is often imagined in terms of a totem or fetish. Totemic works, such as Millie Wilson's Daytona Death
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67. Marcel Duchamp The Bride Stripped by Her Bachelors, Even, 19151923 Color reproduction in Arturo Schwarz, "The Complete Works of Marcel Duchamp," Harry N. Abmms Inc. Publishers NY, 2nd Revised Edition 1970
72. Brains, The journal ofEgghmd Sexuality Volume 1, No.1, Summer 1990 'Zine 73. Physique Pictorial No. 40,June 1987 'Zine 74. Bound & Gagged, Erotic Adventures in Male
Bondage No.l8, September/ October 1990 'Zine
Couple
The couple is the standard social nucleus. In modern Western society, a couple is almost universally considered to be a union ofopposites; that is, male and female. The works here, though, foreground the similarities that can exist between the two halves of a union. Many of the works may allude to the stereotypically negative ', ' view of same-sex couples as narcissistic, however, these artists also put a positive spin on the phenomenon ofrecognition, empathy, and identification that can accomapny attraction based as much on similarlity as on difference. Diane Arbus, Nan Goldin, and Kate Millett present three distinct images oflesbian couples. While Arb us' photograph is set at home and is sympathetic in tone, it remains the view of an outsider. In contrast, Nan Goldin's Siobhan and I: sex (black bra), NYC, an image ofgreat tenderness, is an insider's view. Millett's work is diaristic, a record set forth in brush and ink of the kinds of troubles that plague all relationships. Over the past thirty years, there have been numerous representations of male couples, not all of them by gay artists. Some of these couples have been performative, working as collaborative teams; for example, Gilbert and George depict a benign and cooperative relationship, The Kipper Kids are violent and contestatory, and Pruitt and Early represent themselves as collectable souvenir dolls--equal in their banality and cuddliness. Geoffrey Hendricks represents both the dissolution of one couple and the union of another. His Flux Divorce Box documents the process by which he and his wife, Bici,ended their marriage by bisecting all of their possessions. Hendricks' divided wedding album stands in poignantl' contrast to his bound-together chair, made as part ofJillJohnston's recent marraige to Ingrid Nyeboe.
75. Hippie Dick! No.5, 1993 'Zine 76. Bmr No.6, 1988 'Zine
77. Steve Wolfe
Hollywood Babylon, 1993 Gold plated bronze and oil paint
I0 1. Louise Bourgeois
Tits, 1962-82 Marble
Family
In this group, "family" can be understood in a variety of ways. On the one hand, are works that represent the experience of homosexuality in the nuclear, or biological, family. Other works allude to the groups of friends known among many gay men and lesbians as their "chosen family" (often a crucial substitute for a real family that has disowned them). Finally, we have included under this title works that indicate the larger sense ofkinship and belonging that has coalesced around the gay and lesbian communities as a whole. Both Carrie Moyer and Charles LeDray examine the tensions, erotic and/or violent, that can occur within the biological family. with a tranquility that slips into self-parody, General Idea's Baby Makes 3, presents an image of a "chosen"
92. Pruitt & Early Self-Portraits of the Artists as Dolls, early 1990s Heat transfer photographs on synthetic fibers 93. Geoffrey Hendricks
Flux Divorce Box (handmade box #6), 1973 with Flux Divorce Album, Geoff Hendricks and Peter Moore, 1972, and relics of Flux Divorce Mixed media
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II
nuclear family, tucked into bed with their heads in the clouds. An ideaoffamily as community is expressed in works by Suzanne Lacey, Harmony Hammond, and Kate Delos. Lacey's One Woman Shows documents a sequence ofperformances that sought to create alternative familial structures. This artist's work has often been explicitly concerned with finding new ways for women to come together, often in situations that emphasize the connection betewwn physical and emotional territories. One Woman Shows branching form, made up of participants selecting an ever expanding network of others to participate, mimics the family tree's structure as well as dispersing power and access democratically among the performers. A similar interplay between individual and group is evident in Harmony Hammond's Prerencer and Kate Delos' quartet of symbolic paintings. Hammond's spirit-like forms hover beside each other, comfortable in their similarity and difference. Delos' images derive from ancient Greek and Minoan symbols for women's community. In contrast to these up-beat expressions, McDermott and McGough's painting A Friend ofDorothy, 1943, shows a gay community constituted by a history of slurs and invectives: the artists' strategy here is similar to the kind of reclaiming of negativity that has led to the term "queer" being used in a positive way by many gay men and lesbians. Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt's cellophane and tinfoil drag queens and rats form a community poised between the demonic and the angelic. Lanigan-Schmidt was one of the first artists to resurrect the use of extravagant decoration and ephemeral materials in the late sixties. He was inspired by the over-the-top works ofJack Smith, whose devotion to the secret alchemy of debris, his resolutely outsider position, and his baroque imagination exerted a liberating and transfurmative effect on innumerable artists in the New York scene. To make the photographs included in his Beautiful Book, Smith brought together a family-like ensemble of participants many of whom later became involved in Andy Warhol's infamously dysfunctional on-going "family" scenario known as the Factory.
130. Homocore
Issue No.5, December 1990 'Zine (cover photograph by Daniel Nicoletta)
103. An Oral Herstory of Lesbianism, not dated Announcement (designed by Bia Lowe)
104. Matt Groening
Lift in Hell, 1986
Comic strip from "The Big Book of Hell," Matt Groening Productions, Inc. 1990
11 0. Carrie Moyer
I Don't Have a Name for This Yet, 1994
Acrylic on paper
136. Sisterhood is blooming. Springtime will never be the same, 197 2 Poster (design by Women's Graphics Collective)
137. Bikini Kil, Tn'be 8, Lucy Stoners, 7Year Bitch There's a Dyke in the Pit, not dated
45 rpm record jacket
127. J.D.'s, edited by G.B. Jones and Bruce La Bruce, No.5, 1982 'Zine 128. Tantrum, Spring 1993 'Zine ("Live the Fantasy of Gay" by Tyler-Bob) 129. Gay Liberation, 1970 Poster (graphic design by Su Negrin, photograph by Peter Hujar, mandala by Suzanne Bevier)
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11 5. Thomas LaniganSchmidt
Emprers ofArt, c. 1969 The Mirror of Youth, c. 1969 Drag Queen Shouldering the Dawn, c. 1969 Drag Queen Hooker with Baby Doll, c. 1969 Ballerina, c. 1969
Untitled (Alexis De Lago), c. 1969
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Gallery 6
Orgy
The works in this group represent an expanding circle ofcommunal pleasure and sexual freedom. Among the many challenges that the experiences of gay men and lesbians have posed to the status quo, one of the most significant is their experimentation with a wide variety of sexual pmctices. While the majority of gay men and lesbians may remain in fairly conventional, monogamous sexual relationships, others within these communities have embraced their socially marginal status, welcoming the opportunity to overthrow what are perceived as Puritanical sexual norms. The works in this section explore the pleasures ofconnection, and excess. Often this is expressed formally in exuberant compositions of internal complexity and over-flowing boundaries. In many cases, these are artists who celebmte the democmtic experience of urban life. Several of them seem to want to re-make the entire world in their own image. Nicole Eisenman's installations consistofhundreds of dmwings and other elements that endlessly shufle styles and voices. Eisenman's work runs from stars truck mooning to pure munch to mythologizing to pungent self-mockery-sometimes all in the same dmwing. She borrows visual stylings from 1920sNeo-Classicism, WPA murals, and underground comics. Through all of it, her work alludes to a new kind of queer subjectivity: angry, horny, raucous, and smart. Donna Han shares Eisenman's capacity for sheer output, but her work charts a different territory. While the majority ofEisenman's work is based on figurative imagery, Han achieves her effects largely through patterning and exuberant color. Otherworldly chamcters float through her piecedtogether walls of fabric and paper. Jerome Caja's paintings, with their snickering, crystalline figures and scenarios of copulation and doom, evoke the world views of both Jack Smith and Thomas Lanigan-Schmidt. It is also possible to catch a glimpse ofFrid a Kahlo in Caja's autobiogmphical wrestlings with selfhood,
existential pain, and oppressive Catholicism. Like Eisenman and Han, however, Caja deals with serious issues by flipping them into parody. David Hockney's The Hitchhiker and Tee A. Corinne's photogmphs from the series Yantras for Womanlove, all from 1982, use combined and over-lapping imagery to represent the complex nature of consciousness. For Hockney, this consciousness is shifting, fmctured from moment to moment, while Corinne employs similar techniques to imply integmtion and wholeness. Her orgy is peaceable and fullfilling a utopia of pleasure forged out of community. In this section, we have also included works that have broken away from previous formal assumptions. Claes Oldenburg's Soft Drum Set exhibits a yielding sexuality that retains a charge even after its detumescence. Its forms are interlaced, collapsing on each other. This sculpture's hardness-made-soft is contrasted with Steve Wolfe's The Andy Warhol Diaries, in which the softness of a paperback book is made hard by transforming it into silkscreen on wood. While in its overt form, W athol's book is not orgiastic, the book's endless detailing of social commerce, petty squabling, drug excess, and relentless voyuerism certainly are. Oldenburg's soft sculptures were part of a revolutionary exploration of new materials for sculpture. As the 1960s progressed, that explomtion was joined by a great many artists, and their formal innovations have proven one of the greatest influences on the younger genemtion. The 1960s and 70s work of Eva Hesse, Barry LeVa, Richard Tuttle, and Alan Saret is echoed in recent work by artists such as Richard Hawkins and Cary S. Leibowitz. Hawkins uses flimsy and pathetic materials to present a kind of foppish formalism. He combines fascination with stardom with a dandy's fastidiousness. Alternately venerating and attacking the porn stars and rockers that populate his limp assemblages, Hawkins ultimately lifts them to the status of beautiful tmsh. Both the kitsch aspect of Oldenburg's Pop items and the excessive formal qualities of post-Minimalism are echoed in the multiples of Cary S. Leibowitz.
160-61. Tee A. Corinne #42 (Yantras ofWomanlove), 1982 #27 (Yantras ofWomanlove), 1982 Collage of manipulated photographs on rag board 162. David Hockney
The Hitchhiker, 1982 Photographic collageLari Pittman
World
The themes expressed by these works often overlap sexual concerns with broader social and political ones. In New York, in the late 1970s and early 1980s,anumberofartists began to use the city's surfaces as a new platform for their work. Jenny Holzer's Truisms expressed an unrelenting urban paranoia all the more chilling for its anonymity. On the street, it was impossible to tell ifher lists
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of simple phrases were warnings, jokes, or some bizarre ad campaign. The Truisms are the outgrowth of almost two decades of so-called "idea art," but they also owe a great deal to the blank anger, direct action strategies, and low budget means of Punk graphics. At the same time, Keith Haring began amending street and subway ads by adding magic marker drawings of dogs, UFOs, and his soon-to-be-trademarked babies. Harings' drawings later took up entire sheets of blacked-out subway posters, where they began to tell increasingly bizarre stories of alien abductions, social strife, and communication with dolphins. His work has always meant much more on the streets than in the galleries. Despite all the attention to the visual arts in the 1980s, it is arguable that Haring and Barbara Kruger remain the only artists from that decade whose work has had any significant impact on the visual sensibility of the society as a whole. As early as 1982, Haring's characters and abstract designs were being pirated by street-vendors for use on low-budget t-shirts and skirts. His enormous acceptance on the street has stopped almost any serious discussion of his work in the art world. Yet, in a certain sense, one can see Haring's retail store, the Pop Shop, as the inheritor of several generations' desire for an art that is direct and anti-elitist. Haring's buttons, radios, and inflatable babies echo the mail order variety of Fluxus materials and, perhaps to a lesser degree, the funky objects of Oldenburg's legendary Store. A sense of unease and confrontation fills Marlene McCarty's matchbook piece. The double-edged slogan, "Lick me, I'm sick" invites viewers to literally play with fire, while the matches' arrangement on the floor suggests a freshly turned grave. AIDS, sex, and danger come together on this bed of fire. McCarty was a member of Gran Fury, one of the first artists collectives to take on the AIDS crisis. Her work retains much of the rage and directness of that early experience. AIDS activism brought a vast number of artists onto the streets. Boy with arms akimbo/ Girl with arms akimbo and Dyke Action Machine! have works in this section that were used
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on the street to promote queer visibility and confront health issues. Such collaborative, activistic projects have also become important places for queer artists to meet one another and examine issues that have a profound impact on the work they are amking for the art world as well. In many of these gallery works, the confrontation between queer and straight worlds takes on a more intimate, ambivalent tone.
Utopia
The works in this section share a brittle but hopeful beauty. With tenderness and sensuality they present bold and dreamy imaginings of an ideal world. For some, such utopian musings are fantasies that, however impossible to achieve, help to keep hope alive. For others, the contemplation of an ideal, harmonious world reflects a renewed spirituality--a renewal based, at least in part, on the need to find sources ofstrength in the face of the ravages of AIDS. Roni Horn's photographic explorations of Iceland's natural hot springs and Catherine Opie's freeway pictures are both attempts to reinvent the romance of the frontier from a lesbian perspective. Opie's photographs record a wistful appreciation of the Southern California freeway system: the overpasses and concrete vistas assume and odd, almost Classical majesty, summoning us to the road. Horn's suite of photographs maintain a delicate balance between a highly Romanticised experience of the beauty and power ofnarure and an acceptance of the impact of human society. Similarly, Lutz Bacher's Pink Out ofthe Corner (To Jasper Johns), 1963, evokes a sense of transcendental power and intensity while making no effort to conceal the mundane wires and gadgets that comprise the piece itself. Bacher's piece is an hommage to the Dan Flavin pink flourescent piece Pink OutoftheCorner(ToJasperJohns) made in 1963. By giving his piece this title, Flavin made allusion to the life of a friend and artistic colleague while creating an image of pure abstraction. Thus, both Bacher and Flavin forge a link between the complexities of real life and the
180. Dyke Action Machine, n.d. Two posters 181. Boy with Arms Akimbo/Girl with Arms Akimbo
Just Sex/Sex Is, 1989-90 and Safe/Unsafe 1990-91 Posters, postcard and stickers
183. Bureau
In honor of Allen R. Schindler, 1993 Two posters
170. Time Volume 94, No.1, September 1969 Magazine 171. General Idea
FILE, 1972-1989 27 magazines
184. John Gruen, Keith Haring: The Authorized Biography, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1991 book 185. The Pop Shop Catalogue, 1994 Catalogue
186. Frankie Goes to Hollywood
Welcome to Pleasuredome, 1984 Album cover with liner notes
173. Heresis No.l2: Sex Issue, 1981 Magazine 174. On Our Rag, 1991
'Zine
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possibility of sublime experience. Two other artists whose works allude to perfection while staying grounded in the here and now are Siobhan Liddell and Tony Feher. Both attempt to turn the barest of possibilities into the greatest triumphs. Liddell's materials are so slight that they barely exist, yet her sculptures have a potent and remarkable presence, qualities her work shares with that of Roni Horn and Louise Fishman. If this is a distinctly lesbian art, then it draws its inspiration in part from the twentieth-centuty American writer Gertrude Stein, finding poetic power in the simplest means, at once severe and generous. Tony Feher has more in common with the Joseph Cornell's lush, fantastical boxes--works made by Cornell as gifts for friends and family. Feher's sculptures are always a little askew, but their humility is laced with a joyous vision. A similar joy fills Sally Elesby's Surface Decoration and Nicholas Mouiliu-ege's delicate needlepoint Banana Pudding.
Lectures, films, videos and other events in coniunction with the 'lxhibition
Please see the UAM/PFA Calendar for details
Guided tours of the exhibition will be offered on Thursdays at 12:15 pm and 7 pm and on Sundays at 2 pm.
Lectures: Jonathan Katz: "The Art of Code: Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg-a Relationship in Paint" and Erica Rand: "In Your Face, In Your Head: Queer Orgy, Queer Politics"
Sunday, April2, 2:30pm
Performance: Kevin Killian reading "Cut" and Camille Roy :"The Rosy Medallions"
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