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2016 Will be the Year of Robert Mapplethorpe

06/12/2015 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

OUT dot com logo

BY JERRY PORTWOOD
DECEMBER 04 2015 10:55 AM EST
Robert_Mapplethorpe,_Self-portrait,_1980 (Wikipedia)

Self-Portrait, 1980, Robert Mapplethorpe. Photograph from Wikipedia

It’s been more than 25 years since Senator Jesse Helms and others denounced the controversial photographs of Robert Mapplethorpe due to their frank depictions of nudity, sexuality and fetishism, igniting a culture war, the photographer continues to be a touchstone and his work highly collectible. Now it looks like next spring will be a major turning point in Mapplethorpe’s artistic reputation.
Deputing April 2016 on HBO, Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures is a the first feature-length documentary about the artist since his death and is from acclaimed filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Robert Barbato (Inside Deep Throat; HBO’s Wishful Drinking, and The Eyes of Tammy Faye), who are best known as the World of Wonder impresarios, and their breakout hit, RuPaul’s Drag Race.
This coincides with a joint retrospective organized by the Getty Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, titled Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Medium, that both open in March 2016. The concurrent exhibitions about the late, provocative portrait photographer will delve into Mapplethorpe’s disciplined studio practice, figure studies, and legacy, as well as focus on his methods, sources, and creative processes.
More than 300 mostly black-and-white portraits, still lifes and nudes will be on display between the two museums. They jointly acquired most of the art and archives from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation in 2011, including private correspondence, books, and ephemera from the late artist’s estate. In addition, LACMA will be featuring 30 complementary works from other artists as part ofPhysical: Sex and the Body in the 1980s. A new book, Thrill of the Chase: The Wagstaff Collection of Photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum, presents photographs from the extraordinary collection of Sam Wagstaff, Mapplethorpe’s mentor and lover, who was also the subject a biography last year.
The exhibition will then travel to three international venues—including the Musee des Beaux-Arts de Montreal and the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney—after its L.A. run
 

Filed Under: History Tagged With: artist, exhibition, photographer, Robert Mapplethorpe

Book Review: Smash Cut

15/04/2015 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

BRAD GOOCH

Brad Gooch and Howard Brookner in 1982. | Courtesy of Brad Gooch


Reprinted from Huffing Post: Gay Voices – Lila Shapiro – Posted: 04/14/2015 7:35 am EDT
In the first chapter of writer Brad Gooch’s new book Smash Cut, a vivid and searing memoir of gay bohemian life in New York City in the ’70s and ’80s, he visits the apartment of his soon-to-be lover, film director Howard Brookner. The year is 1971, the weather is warm, the mood heady, the real estate cheap.
They arrive on Brookner’s block — the last on Prince Street before the Bowery, “a burnt-out district, full of inky purple shadows tinged with even more of a sickly yellow cast than the West Village, and a smell of gas, rather than dog s–t, in the air. Few lived around here, except the street people, occupying empty eye sockets of windowless apartments across the street; the only business, a pizza shop one corner away.” Brookner’s “vast” loft apartment costs $100 a month in rent.
Today, a one-bedroom apartment on the same block goes for $5,650 a month, according to StreetEasy. On a recent visit to the block, I saw a willowy brunette examining a pair of leather “sweat pants” that retailed for $1,095 at Helmut Lang. In front of a candle shop across the street, the chalkboard advertised three varieties of flower-scented candles — Moroccan rose, Indian jasmine and Japanese peony.
Gooch says he can’t help but feel nostalgic for the old New York, despite its bad smells, its roaches and muggings. In Smash Cut, he seeks to unearth the ruins what he describes as a sort of lost Atlantis. The blocks and buildings still stand, but the spirit of that era was wiped out first by AIDS (which killed Brookner in 1989) and then, in essence, by progress — by the mainstream acceptance of gay life in America.
Gooch — now 63 and married to Paul Raushenbush, executive religion editor at HuffPost — recently sat down with me to talk about his latest work. This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
Why write this book now? What was your seed of inspiration?
We moved to Chelsea Gardens on 23rd Street [in Manhattan], Paul and I. And then every day when I would go to the gym down the street, I would look up at the Chelsea Hotel and see the apartment where Howard and I lived and where I had my 30th birthday party next to the ‘O’ in the ‘Hotel.’ When we moved there, I wasn’t really thinking about this. It wasn’t really weighing on me. I wasn’t thinking that Howard had died two blocks down the street at London Terrace. Somehow when we actually moved there, it sunk in.
Part of why it wasn’t sinking in was because everything was so radically different. It was like another planet. I mean, my life was completely different; Chelsea is unrecognizable from what it was. So I think the daily seeing these same locations and, at the same time, having the eerie feeling of being completely dislocated from them caught my attention.
I loved the line in the book where you write that “the ’70s had a romantic aura because of so much first love among grown men.” But I couldn’t help wondering, do you think that part of that romance becomes clear only in retrospect? That it was such a romantic time because of the AIDS crisis that followed it?
Well, possibly. Meaning that it’s the lost continent of Atlantis. It’s a very distinct time and it really ends, and it really now is history — and that’s so startling.
It’s true, as with great historical events, you wonder, “What if the South had won the Civil War?” What if Robert Mapplethorpe was alive? What if Keith Haring was alive? How would our culture be different? How would gay liberation have gone differently? And we don’t know the answers to these things. And because of what happened, which is like going through a war and all these people were killed, it just becomes its own moment.
I’d love to hear you talk a bit about the theme of “haunting” in the book. There are many references to ghosts and haunting. Was this a conscious decision? Did this happen organically?
I would like to say it was intentional because people have pointed it out and I think it’s wonderful, but I wasn’t really aware of it when it was happening. But that’s the thing of writing, too. All of this stuff, if you’re in the zone, there’s a natural structure and natural imagery to it. So there was always a feeling of being haunted, that’s true, and the Chelsea Hotel seems kind of haunted so it works. I didn’t contrive it.
Can you tell me more about your writing process and what objects and images you looked at while you were writing?
I hadn’t been precious about saving things particularly, so it was interesting to me that I had the chopsticks wrapper on which Howard had written his number the first night we met. At that point we didn’t have iPhones, so if you met someone, you’d write down their number. You would have some place in your house where you’d put all these numbers, and when you needed to call somebody, you’d go through them. There would be so many that you’d throw them away. But somehow I’d kept his number, and I had transferred it, and at this point it becomes almost amazing. And there was a poem I had written to Howard and ripped out and left out on the table, and it amazes me that these things somehow had made it to here.
Do you think you feel differently about this period of life now that you’ve finished writing about it?
In terms of Howard, I do. There was a sense of responsibility to write about him and to record him, and also in a way a responsibility to record that period and that time — because a lot of the people who were the eyewitnesses weren’t around and it was special, particular, an antidote to the present in a way.
Tell me more about that — “an antidote to the present”?
Not at all to be snotty about the present, but I just think in terms of gay history, gay culture. … Back then, there really wasn’t a gay identity yet and we were part of this first out generation. There was an intimacy to it.
Then it was very cheap and that’s why you could have artists and you could have underground clubs. Real estate was nothing. This allowed a lot to happen, but it was also very difficult. I was mugged; everyone was mugged, attacked, robbed. Apartments were full of roaches and the subways didn’t work. People didn’t have answering machines yet. Now it’s much safer and I’m benefiting from that because I’m older, but it’s not the same place. It can’t be.
Thankfully, now we have all these legal protections of gay people and marriage, which I’ve benefited from. And also a place like Chelsea — you have a gay identity to come to. There are gay gyms, gay restaurants, but identities can be confining. There’s a way that New York has become a brand now.
Some gay men who lived through the peak of the AIDS crisis in the ’80s and ’90s talk about survivor’s guilt. Have you experienced that?
I don’t think so. I wrote in the book that at the time, I told Howard I was HIV negative and I cried and he was so happy. To me, that was about separation, that I realized I was going to go on and that we were going to separate and I would face life without Howard. It took me a long time to recover from that.
What do you notice when you return to your old neighborhoods and streets?
It’s funny, you go to some fashion store and you know that that was the Mineshaft [an underground gay bondage club that Gooch once frequented]. People were being whipped where that purse is hanging. I guess there’s something about aging, but you know, it’s more than age because of the way it happened. It accelerated ages. People weren’t all supposed to die when they were 30, and I wasn’t necessarily supposed to still be here.
There are some great celebrity encounters in the book. Of those mentioned, who would you pick if you needed to chose three for a dinner party?
Certainly Robert Mapplethorpe I would really like to see and Andy Warhol. William Burroughs kind of scared me and creeped me out. I don’t know about him. Does Howard count as a celebrity? Those people would make a good dinner party.
If gay marriage had been legal and supported by society back when you met Howard, do you think he would still be alive and the two of you would be married and having kids?
We thought about it in the 1970s and I remember talking about it with my shrink. Howard had kind of a conservative side to him, too. He wanted to become his grandparents in some way. He definitely had a part of him that would have wanted to get married and he definitely wanted to have children.
Do you think society’s lack of acceptance of gay people played a role in Howard’s death?
A big part.
We’d all lived through this incredibly repressive “Leave It to Beaver” world. And very rare was the gay man who didn’t hide and lurk in his high school because of this. The cork pops in some way when you come to New York. It was part of the energy of the period — this extended adolescence and there was love and longing. But at the same time, there was a dark side to all of this. There was a danger to what we were playing around with.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Brad Gooch, Chelsea Gardens, Keith Haring, Paul Raushenbush, Robert Mapplethorpe, Smash Cut

A Fresh Perspective on the Genre Fiction Debate, ‘James Baldwin and the Queer Imagination,’ and More LGBT News

21/11/2014 By David McFarlane Leave a Comment

Posted on 19. Nov, 2014 by Alec Johnsson in Features, News


This week in the LGBT-themed arts:
Jaswinder Bolina writes an essay for the Poetry Foundation on the vulnerability of MFA candidates to classist isolation, and the fallacies of believing that poetry is less relevant today.
Slate chronicles the brief but influential (and possibly romantic) relationship between the two most crucial English gay poets of World War I: Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen.
On December 2, the New York Public Library is hosting a talk with Ayana Mathis and Matt Brim about the latter’s forthcoming book James Baldwin and the Queer Imagination.
Joshua Rothman offers a fresh perspective on the current conflation of literary fiction and genre fiction, using Emily St. John Mandel’s novel Station Eleven as his jumping-off point.
The Cut interviews avant-garde fashion designer Jeremy Scott about coming of age, controversies, celebrities and his new book, which has a cover that uniquely employs the Droste effect.
Slate has posted an exclusive excerpt from Philip Gefter’s new biography on Sam Wagstaff, the foremost patron and boyfriend of groundbreaking late photographer Robert Mapplethorpe.
There is also an excerpt, on Vulture, from gay director Justin Simien’s companion book to his film Dear White People, about how reality television perpetrates stereotypes.
The Poetry Foundation also discusses this year’s Miami Book Fair International–which will also feature a commemoration of James Baldwin–with co-organizer Adam Fitzgerald.
The Hollywood Reporter covers the recent reunion–in Orange County, California–of Stephen Sondheim and the original cast of Into the Woods, which debuted in San Diego in 1987.
This past week saw this year’s annual Bent-Con, an LGBT-flavored science fiction and comic book convention in Los Angeles. Here’s a photo essay of the event.
Dan Schulman and Dana Goldstein reveal the process that their books went through from original conception, through development, to the bestseller list.
Joan Allen, William H. Macy, and Brie Larson are among the actors set to star in a Lenny Abrahamson-directed adaptation of Emma Donoghue’s novel Room.
Dave Holmes, TV personality and  columnist for Vulture, is at work on his first book, an autobiographical comedy tentatively titled Party of One.
– See more at: http://www.lambdaliterary.org/features/11/19/a-fresh-perspective-on-the-genre-fiction-debate-james-baldwin-and-the-queer-imagination-and-more-lgbt-news/?utm_source=Lambda+Literary+Review+November+14th%2C+2014&utm_campaign=Newsletters&utm_medium=email#sthash.DsOFJnGf.dpuf

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Adam Fitzgerald, Alec johnsson, Ayana Mathis, Bent-Con, Dan Schulman, Dana Goldstein, Dave Holmes, Dear White People, Emily St. John Mandel, Emma Donoghue, Into the Woods, James Baldwin, Jaswinder Bolina, Jeremy Scott, Joshua Rothman, Justin Simien, Matt Brim, MFA, miami book fair, Philip Gefter, primary, reality tv, Robert Mapplethorpe, Room, Sam Wagstaff, Siegfried Sassoon, Station Eleven, Stephen Sondheim, Wilfred Owen

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