|
East Village USA
December 9, 2004 - March 19, 2005
Imagine a village where everybody is an artist, nobody has
or needs a steady job, and anyone can be the art world's Next
Big Thing. Such was the myth (and occasionally the reality)
of the East Village in the mid-1980s, when glamour and sleaze
were nearly indistinguishable, and the boy next door was an
androgynous, foot-high-peroxide-pompadour-sporting singer
named John Sex. It was the height of the Reagan era, with
its Cold War paranoia, intensified by growing nuclear fears,
and inner cities and civic institutions in a state of increased
upheaval and decay. Meanwhile, the East Village was busy inverting
the values of trickle-down economics and gunboat diplomacy
by transforming itself into the American dream's dark underside,
its evil twin, its inner child run amok.
Like many contested moments in recent cultural history, the
beginnings and endings of the East Village art scene vary
depending on whose point of view is being considered. There
is, however, general consensus about three crucial factors
that synchronized at the time and pulled all the other elements
into place. The first was the Lower East Side's long and charged
history as a stronghold of radical bohemianism. The second
was the sweeping appearance of neighborhood alternative spaces
in the late 1970s, which drew many artists to the area. And
the third was the rapid gestation of the hip-hop movement,
beginning in the South Bronx during the mid-1970s and working
its way downtown in the form of the predominantly graffiti-based
FUN Gallery, which opened its doors in 1981 and was soon giving
Jean-Michel Basquiat, Futura 2000, Keith Haring, and
Kenny Scharf (among others) their first one-person
gallery shows.

The largest body of work presented in East Village USA consists
of paintings, sculptures, and photographs that were first
presented in East Village galleries during the years 1981
through late 1987, by which point the galleries themselves
(whose number had reached the low hundreds) began closing
faster than they were opening. Although the East Village eventually
became synonymous with a mid-1980s generation of colorful,
funky, and often mock-Expressionist painters and sculptors,
the more complicated reality is that the gallery scene was
a hotbed of competing styles and attitudes that would eventually
see the emergence of more deadpan, conceptually based artists
such as Jeff Koons and Peter Halley as the logical
antidote to an excess of glitter and gore.
The exhibition opens with pivotal early works by painters
Kenny Scharf, Philip Taaffe, and Martin Wong,
and makes a case for keeping such stylistic diversity at the
forefront of our interpretation of the period. Scharf's warped
appropriations of Jetsons cartoon characters are in some ways
the antithesis of Taaffe's meticulous layering of images borrowed
from Ellsworth Kelly and Bridget Riley; nevertheless, their
shared use of cultural quotations links them to a broader
1980s project of emphatically refuting the myth of artistic
originality. Wong's African Temple at 9th Street reveals a
completely different temperament, that of a self-taught artist
enthralled by his adopted city and the vibrancy of even its
most transient inhabitants.
The sequence of rooms in East Village USA follows a loose
chronology, beginning with works by artists associated with
the collaborative group CoLab and its watershed 1980 exhibition
Times Square Show: Jane Dickson, Bobby G, Jenny Holzer,
Becky Howland, Joseph Nechvatal, Tom Otterness, and Kiki
Smith. The direct connection between these works and those
of the graffiti generation represented by FUN Gallery, which
is evident in the visual proximity of the examples shown here,
reflects the shared sympathies felt at the time by the artists
themselves. The exhibition encourages establishing a deeper
link between the better-known Basquiat and Haring and artists
such as Crash, Daze, Futura 2000, Lady Pink, Lee
Quinones, and Zephyr, who all began their careers
painting on subway trains and in so doing helped develop the
potent fusion of public gesture, post-Pop sensibility, and
semi-criminal status that became such a powerful lure to artists
of the era. In viewing, in one place, a short film clip of
Basquiat in his street role as SAMO, Quinones's starkly violent
painting Life Takes a Life, Lady Pink's collaboration with
Jenny Holzer, and Keily Jenkins's gleefully satiric
sculpture Home of the Brave, we are able to discern an urban
reality whose complex inner workings are all the more compelling
for being seen together for the first time since they were
made.

The artists associated with Gracie Mansion Gallery were among
the most dynamic of the period, and the gallery, one of the
East Village's first, soon became associated with a "New
Romantic" style that embraced Rodney Alan Greenblat's
cartoon-inspired paintings and furniture-sculpture; Mike
Bidlo's direct appropriations from Pollock and Warhol;
Stephen Lack's droll views of American stereotypes;
David Sandlin's feverish visions of himself, his wife,
and the Pulaski Skyway; and David Wojnarowicz's epic
retelling of his life story as the American dream gone wrong.
A related group of artists, associated with galleries such
as PPOW, explored a more socially engaged view of art, with
Sue Coe merging as a key figure in the East Village's
early fusion of graphic art and painting, especially in her
timely revamping of such early twentieth-century figures as
Otto Dix.
The opening of Pat Hearn Gallery in 1984 signaled an important
turning point in the East Village aesthetic. The cool, stripped-down
paintings of Taaffe and Peter Schuyff, and the more
Neo-Surrealist work of George Condo, evoked a stylistic
sophistication that seemed to spurn some of the East Village's
proletarian trappings in favor of artworks and galleries that
were every bit as polished as their uptown counterparts. Hearn,
and later Massimo Audiello, also championed the work of artists
such as photographer Jimmy de Sana, whose pictures
referenced the rituals of bondage and S&M, and McDermott
& McGough, whose collaborative paintings campily duplicated
the modes of antique genres. By making a point of changing
locations and artists as it suited her evolving vision, Hearn
challenged the notion of the gallery roster as a statement
of personal conviction in favor of a more fluid investigation
into visual culture in the broader sense.
The last group of artists to successfully ride the East Village
media wave of notoriety were those associated with International
with Monument, especially Jeff Koons, Peter Halley, Ashley
Bickerton, and the gallery's co-owner Meyer Vaisman.
Encompassing as well the more established photo-based artists
Sarah Charlesworth, Richard Prince, and Laurie Simmons,
the program at International with Monument combined with that
at Nature Morte and other anti-angst galleries to signal that
the Neo-Expressionist school of the 1980s had finally run
its course; these artists saw themselves as successors to
a photo-appropriation movement that had also developed in
the late 1970s and early 1980s but had never been properly
credited. Today one can see in Koons's bronze life raft and
Prince's borrowed image of Brooke Shields traces of a more
caustic discourse regarding the role of power and money in
people's everyday lives. Even in apparently more lighthearted
works such as Simmons's Tourism photographs, Peter Nagy's
absurd museum floor plan, and David Robbins's head-shot
photos of his contemporaries posed as would-be entertainers,
it is clear that the guise of naïvité and childlike
innocence had entirely lost its appeal.
The narrative of the East Village cannot be relayed without
giving attention to the devastating role played by AIDS, in
terms of both the work created at the time and in the neighborhood's
eventual demise as a gallery district. A room in East Village
USA is devoted to conveying the rapid toll taken by the epidemic
on many of the neighborhood's local heroes, especially long-term
East Village residents Jack Smith, Peter Hujar, and
Paul Thek, for whom recognition came posthumously.
Beginning with pop singer Klaus Nomi and writer/artist Nicolas
Moufarrege, whose magazine articles had provided the East
Village galleries their first media exposure, this section
of the exhibition focuses both on more established artists
such as Wojnarowicz, whose natural activist side was ignited
by the crisis, and on those, including Arch Connelly, Luis
Frangella, Greer Lankton, and Tseng Kwong Chi,
whose art might be better known today had they survived their
mid-thirties.
In the final analysis, the East Village was about much more
than the artists and the galleries. It was also a nonstop
party, a continual flow of outsized personalities, and an
ever-unfolding treasure trove of performance. The last two
sections of East Village USA examine, respectively, the legacy
of East Village performance and the rich photographic documentation
of the period-the who, what, where, and how much. In the Media
Lounge and at various points throughout the exhibition, film
and video are deployed to communicate the close tie that existed
between visual and performing artists. From Glenn O'Brien's
late 1970s cable show TV Party and Charlie Ahearn's
pioneering rap, graffiti, and break-dancing film Wild Style
to Richard Kern's music video for Sonic Youth's
"Death Valley 69" and Nelson Sullivan's video forays
into the Pyramid Lounge, this section also provides an opportunity
to revisit key works by an eclectic roster of artists, including
Ethyl Eichelberger, John Epperson (Lypsinka), Karen Finley,
John Jesurun, John Kelly, Ann Magnuson, Frank Maya, Frank
Moore, Tom Rubnitz, Jim Self, and Fiona Templeton.

The second-floor gallery explores the work of a diverse group
of photographers who were part of the East Village scene.
Dona Ann McAdams's role as house photographer at P.S.
122 made her an insider at a vital moment in the evolution
of performance, while Tom Warren's unassuming manner
enabled him to make portraits of hundreds of the period's
most memorable individuals. Timothy Greenfield-Sanders's
series depicting East Village gallerists, critics, and curators
as The New Irascibles is already legendary, while Ande'
Whyland's backstage views of early Wigstocks have rarely
been seen. Patrick McMullan's high-energy shots of
club life help to evoke a departed era, while Hope Sandrow's
and Peter Hujar's more introspective views consider
the inner life of a few key individuals who have come and
gone. These images, along with the off-site film program and
the relatively casual presentations at different points in
the exhibition of ephemera and graphic art connected to the
East Village, attempt to make the case that the artistic richness
of this era, which an exhibition of this scale can only begin
to consider, encompasses a complete spectrum of cultural expressions,
bringing it much closer to our own moment in time than we
had ever imagined possible.
Click HERE
for a complete list of artists in East Village USA.
East Village USA is organized by Dan Cameron.
Generous support for the exhibition has been provided by
the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Horace
W. Goldsmith Foundation.
Educational Programs for youth are supported in part by the
Keith Haring Foundation.
Public programs for East Village USA are made possible by
|