Mask No. 1David Wojnarowicz, ‘Arthur Rimbaud in New York’ series, 1978-79Arthur Rim
Mask No. 1David Wojnarowicz, ‘Arthur Rimbaud in New York’ series, 1978-79Arthur Rimbaud in New York, one of David Wojnarowicz’s few incursions into photography, is the articulation of a testimony to urban, social and political change in New York.Wojnarowicz, using the figure of the accursed poet as the only way for an artist to intervene in reality, chronicles his own life and his emotional relationship with New York City in the late 1970s. The artist portrays himself wearing a mask of the French poet Arthur Rimbaud, thereby taking on his identity and highlighting the parallels in their lives: the violence suffered in their youths, the feeling of being denied freedom, the desire to live far away from the bourgeois environment and the fact of their homosexuality. Wojnarowicz is juxtaposing the historical time of the symbolist poet with the artist’s present.The series, taken in places that the artist used to frequent with photographer Peter Hujar, represents the emergence of identity politics and queer visibility in contemporary art, and the debates surrounding the public sphere as a space for individual non-conformity that were to shape the 1980s. The series also represents a contemplation of the end of the experimental artists’ collectives on the Lower East Side, as gentrification and urban speculation transformed the neighbourhood, and AIDS had begun to decimate the gay community, also causing the early death of the artist in 1992.-Salvador NadalesUpdate from ilimitablespaces: “If I may add something to this, the model in the photos is actually Brian Butterick, David Wojnarowicz’s friend and sometime collaborator. This series was part of Wojnarowicz’s break into the art world but also among his first explorations of art as a personally expressive medium.” -- source link
#david wojnarowicz#peter hujar#photography#artist#east village#new york#arthur rimbaud#lgbtqia