Peter Hujar: Matthew Marks Gallery.Peter Hujar (1934-1987) is a hard photographer to pin down--to brand, so to speak--which might be one reason why his reputation is still percolating from "insider's insider" status toward the mainstream. He has been compared aptly to Berenice Abbott and Eugene Atget, to Weegee and Richard Avedon, Diane Arbus and Nan Goldin. He was a storyteller; he was a formalist; he was a portraitist of artists, performers, and intellectuals; he was a chronicler of life on the margins. His work exudes insouciant in·sou·ci·ant adj. Marked by blithe unconcern; nonchalant. [French : in-, not (from Old French; see in-1) + souciant, present participle of soucier, verve, serene detachment, gothic creepiness. If he was consistently animated by any single impulse, it seems to have been an attraction to contradiction, as evidenced by the title of the only book he published during his lifetime: Portraits in Life and Death, 1976, which juxtaposed jux·ta·pose tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. pictures of his friends with photos of corpses in the catacombs of Palermo. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Recently shown at Matthew Marks Gallery, Hujar's "Night" pictures are a group of forty-three square-format black-and-white photographs, all but one dated from 1974 to 1985, all taken between dusk and dawn and almost all in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . Fittingly they seem preoccupied as much with light as with darkness, or rather, with the formal interplay between the two. In brooding, unpopulated streetscapes that show empty West Side intersections, warehouses, or derelict diners and gas stations, Hujar tunes in to the inimitably bilious bil·ious adj. 1. Of, relating to, or containing bile; biliary. 2. Characterized by an excess secretion of bile. 3. chiaroscuro chiaroscuro (kyärōsk `rō) [Ital.,=light and dark], term once applied to an early method of printing woodcuts from several blocks and also to works in black and white or monotone. of a mercury streetlamp casting its bleaching light on cobblestones, asphalt, corrugated cor·ru·gate v. cor·ru·gat·ed, cor·ru·gat·ing, cor·ru·gates v.tr. To shape into folds or parallel and alternating ridges and grooves. v.intr. trashcans, and security gates, then abruptly fading out into pools of shadow. This is the instantly recognizable light of an urban night on the wane, the light of crime, early-onset hangovers, and diminishing returns. But when Hujar steps back, as he does in a number of sweeping shots of institutional architecture--corporate high-rises, City Hall, an avenue of nine-teenth-century office buildings--the light seems almost beneficent, emanating in phosphorescent phos·pho·res·cence n. 1. Persistent emission of light following exposure to and removal of incident radiation. 2. Emission of light without burning or by very slow burning without appreciable heat, as from the slow oxidation of penumbrae from intermittently illuminated windows. Together these images articulate a sort of pigeon's-eye view of the city, alternately, as Oscar Wilde would have it, down in the gutter and gazing at the stars. The people who appear in fifteen of the pictures--drag queens with hyperdilated pupils, a young girl nodding out in a hallway, men cruising in parks, Hujar's longtime boyfriend David Wojnarowicz lighting a cigarette--might be the sort Wilde had in mind when he coined his aphorism aphorism (ăf`ərĭz'əm), short, pithy statement of an evident truth concerned with life or nature; distinguished from the axiom because its truth is not capable of scientific demonstration. . They've all ventured out into the city at night to look for something that surpasses, and subverts, the quotidian quotidian /quo·tid·i·an/ (kwo-tid´e-an) recurring every day; see malaria. quo·tid·i·an adj. Recurring daily. Used especially of attacks of malaria. . In 1990, Wojnarowicz wrote, "No one can really explain in a rational way what makes a good or bad photograph.... This is why the art world will not throw billions of dollars at photography the way it has at painting; and that is what makes it an exciting medium." Fifteen years later, Wojnarowicz's faith in photography as an inherently subversive medium, perpetually beyond the pale of the culture industry, is a ghost of history--just one of the many ghosts that populate these photographs. Let's hope they keep haunting us. |
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