PETER HUJAR CAPTURES QUEER BLISS IN “CRUISING UTOPIA”
IN A NEW DIGITAL EXHIBITION AT PACE GALLERY, PHOTOGRAPHER PETER HUJAR EXPLORES THE WORLD OF QUEER CRUISING.
By WALLACE LUDEL
IN A NEW DIGITAL EXHIBITION AT PACE GALLERY, PHOTOGRAPHER PETER HUJAR EXPLORES THE WORLD OF QUEER CRUISING.
By WALLACE LUDEL
https://www.theartnewspaper.com/news/pace-gallery-men-kissing-instagram?null
By Trupti Rami
https://www.vulture.com/2020/06/peter-hujar-cruising-utopia-pace-gallery.html
The 1969 uprising in New York City changed the art world—and the world at large—forever.
TextAshleigh Kane
Limited Edition Screen-Printed Richard Gallo T-shirts are now available for pre-order. Please visit @richie.gallo for more information.
The ideal man is an archetype that changes with the times. A new Barbican exhibition asks – what does he look like, then and now?
by Yo Zushi
https://www.newstatesman.com/masculinities-liberation-through-photography-barbican-gallery-review
From Cupid to Kahlo to Keats — the artworks and objects that, when Valentine’s Day comes, encapsulate the power of love
Rebecca Jones: Head of Sale, Photographs
‘Peter Hujar met poet and visual artist David Wojnarowicz in 1980, a year before he made this portrait in his East Village studio. When I look at this picture, which was recently on show at the Jeu de Paume in Paris, I see the love between two people, both estranged from their birth families, left to build their own families within their marginalised community.
Peter Hujar: David Wojnarowicz Reclining (II), 1981. Vintage gelatin silver print, 20 x 16 in (50.8 × 40.6 cm). Courtesy Peter Hujar Archive, Pace/MacGill Gallery, and Fraenkel Gallery
‘Wojnarowicz was diagnosed with AIDS shortly after Hujar’s own AIDS-related death in 1987. In an interview Wojnarowicz once said, “Everything I made, I made for Peter.”’
https://www.christies.com/features/The-art-of-love-10287-1.aspx?sc_lang=en
by Michael Grieve
There is one photograph that has had a profound effect on me. It’s by Peter Hujar of a man with an erect penis, called Seated Nude, Bruce de Sainte Croix from 1976. I saw it the first time I came to NYC in a small group show, and I had never seen nudity and sexuality shown with such grace and objectivity.
Masculinity, and its many complex and contradictory iterations, will take centre stage in a new exhibition opening at The Barbican in February. Masculinities: Liberation through Photography will include the work of over 50 photographers and filmmakers from the 1960s through today – from Kenneth Anger, Peter Hujar and David Wojnarowicz to Laurie Anderson, Collier Schorr and Rineke Dijkstra. Each of the featured works serves to debunk or disrupt the myths surrounding modern masculinity in some way, while exploring how masculinity is “experienced, performed, coded and socially constructed”. The show will be divided into six sections, tackling themes of queer identity, the black body, power and patriarchy, female perceptions of men, heteronormative hypermasculine stereotypes, fatherhood and family.
https://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/12148/planning-ahead-the-best-exhibitions-to-see-in-2020
by Costanza Spina
by Brian Dillon
https://www.lrb.co.uk/v41/n24/brian-dillon/at-the-jeu-de-paume