In the Curator’s
Statement:
Browsing the
Visual AIDS archive, I was drawn to several artists' works
that focused on men's representations of women and women's
representations of men. Within the archive these were rather
rare to come across and I wanted to bring several examples
together and think about the connection and roles that each
play for and towards each other in a queer or other marginalized
positions.
There is documentation of public demonstrations and non-political
moments: W. Benjamin Incerti's intimate photograph Untitled
(1991), which captures the strength and emotion of two women
embracing at an AIDS protest, and Vincent Cianni's photograph
Dancing at Johnny's Birthday Party, Berry St., Williamsburg,
Brooklyn (1997) of two teenage boys dancing together
side-by-side with several boy-girl pairings. Incerti (1951-1993)
was a Boston-based activist and photographer who worked
to promote AIDS education and government awareness and Cianni
is a photographer whose work includes life in pre-gentrified
Williamsburg of the 1990s.
In David Wojnarowicz's Untitled from Sex Series (for
Marion Scemama) (1988-89), he inserts an image of two
women engaged in a sex act into a stock image of the Brooklyn
and Manhattan Bridge spans, making the private public, speaking
to the personal and political urgency of the AIDS epidemic.
The work questions what we look at and what we ignore of
gay sex in mass culture, and the relationship between men
and women in AIDS activism. And I am intrigued by Loreen
Bryant, an older black woman who lives in New York, and
her choice of young, white homoerotic subject matter and
the matter-of-factness of the drawings she makes like Draws
Pulling (2005) and Untitled (Exhaustion) (2005).
I wonder what this religious mother and grandmother thinks
about the focus on white male body in the promotion of AIDS,
sexuality and health.
There are David Abbott's paintings, Rita (1996)
and All Girls Together (1992) of gender-ambiguous
"women"; Nelson Edwin Rodriguez' photograph Untitled
(Self-Portrait) (1994) of himself posed flirtatiously
competing with the gaze of the poster-girl staring at us
from behind him; and Darrell Jones' drawing Women
(1996) of three women modeling popular variations of the
time's hair stylings. These charming and un-self-consciously
honest works all speak to the queer spell that women cast
over men.
Tara Popick's photographs are of anonymous figures: Untitled
(1998) of a pregnant woman pulling her partner close as
he kisses her belly, and Embrace (1997), a similarly
composed image of a nude man looking down at the light touching
his hands. There is an unquestioning openness in these images.
Popick's work suggests a longing both in her subjects themselves
and what she sees in them. In René Capone's drawing
Prodigal Lover (2001) what might at first be taken
as a young man's struggle (to whom or what has he returned?)
may best be left open as we know not whether the lover from
the title is the male or female, the sexuality therein,
nor the nature of their embrace.
b i o g r a p h y
Paul Mpagi Sepuya is a Brooklyn-based artist working in
photography, zines and video projects that have been exhibited
in New York, Los Angeles, Basel, Sydney, Toronto, Paris
and Berlin. His work has been featured and reviewed in BUTT,
Interview, Capricious, Paper and The New York Times,
among others. A monograph of his work, Beloved Object
and Amorous Subject, Revisited, was published by Envoy
Enterprises, New York in 2008.
He was recently featured in the New York City exhibitions
30 Seconds Off an Inch, at the Studio Museum in
Harlem, and Compassion, at the Union Theological
Seminary, curated by AA Bronson. Sepuya studied photography
at NYU's Tisch School of the Arts. He will have an upcoming
solo exhibition at Envoy Enterprises in New York City in
September-October 2010 and is publishing a collaborative
book project with artist Timothy Hull titled The Accidental
Egyptian and Occidental Arrangements, out this summer.
He was a 2009-2010 LMCC Workspace artist-in-residence and
will be a summer artist-in-residence this June at the Center
for Photography at Woodstock.
Every
month, Visual AIDS invites guest curators,
drawn from both the arts and AIDS communities, to select several
works from the Frank Moore Archive Project.
Founded in 1988 by arts professionals as a response to the
effects of AIDS on the arts community and as a way of organizing
artists, arts institutions, and arts audiences towards direct
action, Visual AIDS has evolved into an arts organization
with a two-pronged mission: 1) Through the Frank Moore Archive
Project, the largest slide library of work by artists living
with HIV and the estates of artists who have died of AIDS,
Visual AIDS historicizes the contributions of visual artists
with HIV while supporting their ability to continue making
art and furthering their professional careers, 2) In collaboration
with museums, galleries, artists, schools, and AIDS service
organizations, Visual AIDS produces exhibitions, publications,
and events utilizing visual art to spread the message “AIDS
IS NOT OVER.”
The Body
is now the most frequently visited HIV/AIDS-related site on
the Web, according to the Medical Library Association and
also the most frequently visited disease-specific site on
the Web, according to Hot 100. The Body contains a rich collection
of information on topics ranging from HIV prevention, state-of-the-art
treatment issues, humor and art. An invaluable resource, The
Body is used by clinicians, patients and the general public.
Part of The Body's mission is to enable artistic expression
to reach the Web, and to join art with other resources needed
to help the public comprehend the enormity and devastation
of the AIDS pandemic and to experience its human and spiritual
dimensions. |