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Downtown NYC in the 1980s Ronald Reagan Presidency (1981–1989)

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Presentation on theme: "Downtown NYC in the 1980s Ronald Reagan Presidency (1981–1989)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Downtown NYC in the 1980s Ronald Reagan Presidency (1981–1989)

2 David Wojnarowicz (wō-n ə -RŌ-vich, US, 1954 -1992) writer and visual artist in painting, mixed media, photomontage, performance, and installation (left) Still from Silence=Death, 1990, video, 60 min (right) Untitled, 1983 Warning: the content of Wojnarowicz’s art is meant to disturb you. Feel free to leave for 15 minutes or so if you do not want to see it.

3 Wojnarowicz, Untitled (One day this kid...), 1990, gelatin-silver print, 30 x 40 in

4 David Wojnarowicz, Arthur Rimbaud in New York, 1978-79 from a series of 24 gelatin-silver prints, 10 x 8 in each

5 David Wojnarowicz, Arthur Rimbaud in New York, 1978-79

6 Doug Hall, Close to the Knives - David Wojnarowicz, 2001, Digital C-print, 60 x 48 inches, ed. of 6,

7 David Wojnarowicz, The Death of American Spirituality, 1987 mixed media on plywood (two panels), 81 x 88 in overall

8 David Wojnarowicz, Untitled (Burning Child), Installation view, Gracie Mansion Gallery, NYC, 1984

9 David Wojnarowicz, Untitled, 1985, pig skull with map and money collage and acrylic paint "Bottom line, if people don't say what they believe, those ideas and feelings get lost. If they are lost often enough, those ideas and feelings never return.“ - Wojnarowicz

10 David Wojnarowicz, The Newspaper as National Voodoo: A Brief History of the U.S.A., 1986, acrylic, spray paint, and collage on wood, 67 ½ x 79 in

11 Wojnarowicz, Water, 1987, acrylic, ink, and collage on masonite, 72 x 96 in. One of series of Four Elements paintings: water, fire, earth, wind, sea of sperm, ‘storyboard’ that juxtaposes explicit sexual imagery with nature iconography "I have never had what could be described as an ART EDUCATION. I am not even sure what an ART EDUCATION is."

12 Wojnarowicz, ITSOFOMO: In the Shadow of Forward Motion, 1989, Multi-media one-hour performance, collaboration with composer Ben Neill at The Kitchen, New York. Performed internationally. Four video screens 7-minute selection from ITSOFOMO videos: http://youtu.be/BPf8gHJ13Do

13 Nan Goldin (US, b. 1953) Nan and Brian in Bed, NYC, 1983; (right) Nan One Month after Being Battered, NYC, 1984 From Ballad of Sexual Dependency, a 700-image slide show

14 Nan Goldin, Trixie on the Cot, NYC, 1979, cibachrome print, 27 3/8 x 40 'There is a popular notion, that the photographer is by nature a voyeur, the last one invited to the party. But I'm not crashing; this is my party. This is my family, my history.' - Nan Goldin

15 Nan Goldin, (left) Naomi and Marlene on the balcony, Boston, 1972, gelatin- silver print (right) Roommate with teacup, Boston, 1973. Gelatin-silver print, 20x16 in

16 VINCENT VAN GOGH (Dutch Post-Impressionist Painter, 1853-1890), The Night Café, 1888. Oil on canvas, approx. 2’ 4 1/2” x 3’. Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven. “A place where one can ruin oneself, go mad, or commit a crime”

17 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (French, 1864–1901), At the Moulin Rouge, 1892-1895, oil on canvas, approx. 4’ x 4’7” Chicago Art Institute

18 Robert Mapplethorpe (American, 1946-1989), Self-Portraits, 1975 and (right) 1989. His work The 1970s until the early ’80s: between the Stonewall riots ( June 28, 1969 ) and the AIDS epidemic, which began in 1981 in the US.

19 Robert Mapplethorpe, (left) Apollo, 1988; (right) Ken Moody, 1986

20 Robert Mapplethorpe, (left) Orchid in White Vase, 1982; and (right) Derrick Cross, 1982. Is there such a thing as “Gay” aesthetics?

21 Mapplethorpe, Louise Bourgeois, 1982 Mapplethorpe, Warhol, 1986

22 Robert Mapplethorpe Lisa Lyon, 1982

23 Robert Mapplethorpe, Carleton, 1987, gelatin silver print, edition 1/10, image: 19 ¼ x 19 ¼”. The retrospective touring exhibition in 1989-90, the year after Mapplethorpe's death, was censored by U.S. Senator Jesse Helms and others. The Corcoran closed it to avoid losing NEA funding. Protests included projections of Mapplethorpe’s photographs on the Corcoran. For more on the chronology of Reagan-era censorship: http://www.publiceye.org/theocrat/Mapplethorpe_Chrono.html http://www.publiceye.org/theocrat/Mapplethorpe_Chrono.html

24 Jean-Michel Basquiat (US, 1960 - 1988) in his studio,1985 (25 years old) 1996 movie directed by Julian Schnabel

25 In 1977 Basquiat started to spray paint cryptic sayings on walls around lower Manhattan and signing them SAMO© (pronounced “same oh’, as in “same old shit”) graffiti tag for Basquait and Al Diaz. This video still is from 1981 “SAMO© as an end to mindwash religion, nowhere politics, and bogus philosophy." "SAMO© saves idiots“

26 June 1980, more than a hundred artists, including graffiti artist, SAMO, installed their work in an empty massage parlor near Times Square. Poster for a 1980 movie Times Square Show, 2 nd floor with paintings by Tom Otterness announcing types of art inside

27 Jean-Michel Basquiat, Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump, 1982, Acrylic, oil paintstick, and spray paint on canvas, 7ft 10in x 13ft 9in “Basquiat’s work gives that private anguish artistic expression.” bell hooks

28 Jean-Michel Basquiat, Charles the First, 1982, acrylic and oilstick on canvas, triptych, 6ft 6in x 5ft 2in

29 Basquiat and Warhol, 1984. Warhol dies in 1987. 1985 Basquiat portrait by Warhol, 1984

30 Keith Haring (US, 1958-1990, 32 years), 1983 drawing in a Manhattan subway station Drew over 5,000 between 1981-85 "One day, riding in the subway, I saw this empty black panel where an advertisement was supposed to go. I immediately realized that this was the perfect place to draw. I went back above ground to a card shop and bought a box of white chalk, went down and did a drawing on it.... I kept seeing more and more of these black spaces, and I drew on them whenever I saw one. Because they were so fragile, people left them alone and respected them; they didn't rub them out or try to mess them up. It gave them this other power. It was this chalk-white fragile thing in the middle of all this power and tension and violence that the subway was. People were completely enthralled." -- Keith Haring, in Rolling Stone, August 10, 1989

31 “If I was going to draw, there had to be a reason. That reason, I decided, was for people. The only way art lives is through the experience of the observer. The reality of art begins in the eyes of the beholder and gains power through imagination, invention, and confrontation.” Keith Haring

32 Keith Haring, (center) Untitled, 1982, Vinyl paint on vinyl tarpaulin, 144 x 144 in (left) “radiant baby” and “barking dog,” (below) “TV man.” Haring’s iconography / semiotics (language of signs) Jean Dubuffet (French) “Art Brut,” 1950s urban Primitivism: a source for Haring

33 Keith Haring, Untitled, 1984, acrylic on muslin tarpaulin, 120 x 180 in

34 Haring, Pop Shop, SoHo, 1986

35 Keith Haring painting the Berlin Wall, 1986, at the invitation of the museum at Checkpoint Charlie


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