10/08/2018

The Untold Stories Behind Peter Hujar’s Lesser-Known Works





New York-based artist Peter Hujar never encountered much in the way of success in the course of his lifetime, explains Joel Smith, the curator behind a new exhibition of his powerful photographs entitled Speed of Life at that city’s The Morgan Library and Museum. Hujar was simply not a self-promoter – a fact which placed him in stark contrast with his contemporaries. His restrained nature was by no means due to a lack of confidence, however. “I would say it’s exactly the opposite,” Smith continues. “He felt that the work was so strong that it should speak for itself – it was a temperamental disinclination to put himself forward. So when the work did not go over the top without effort, I think this confirmed his worst suspicions about the world. And when a photographer like Robert Mapplethorpe, who really relished the opportunity to promote himself, made it straight up to the top, and defined a new top for what a contemporary photography could do in terms of renown, that also confirmed for Hujar that this world was not all for him.”

Disenchanted, Hujar turned to the East Village underworld in which he felt himself to be most at home, and set about creating singularly affecting photographs of the artists, writers and thinkers – a set of people he considered the greatest of the era, but who also happened to be “simply his neighbours, and the people that he sees two or three nights a week” – instead. He died tragically early in 1987, at the age of 53, having contracted AIDS, but the impact he made over the course of his relatively short career is still felt today.
“Those who knew him the longest and the closest speak of how funny he was, how well read, how playful, and how unpredictable – which is to say that he could fall into depressions that really cut him off from the world,” says Smith. “He was a very sensitive person, but on the other had a very tough personality, as somebody who was used to rejection of various kinds. A central fact about him is that he knows by the early 1950s that he’s gay, and that he will not be accepted for that, and what he does about it is move out, at age 16, into an apartment of his own in Greenwich Village, which is the one place that he could be where it would not be an issue. Because he did not present as homosexual in any of the standard ways that that would have been visible at that time, people took him as straight for decades of his life, and all of that sort of informs his special role in a changed world. Once there becomes a way of being out of the closet, he still continues to be the person he’s always been.”

At that time his was a “secret fame”, Smith says – but in the years since the world has learned more about him. Perhaps as a result, his oeuvre has been reduced down to a few instantly recognisable portraits. Take the 1973 shot Candy Darling on her Deathbed, for example, a quiet and serenely sentimental image capturing the Velvet Underground muse reclining as though for a restful moment in the final days of her life. Or, writer and political activist Susan Sontag stretched out, gazing thoughtfully into the air above her. “It’s altogether appropriate that [these images] are well known,” says Smith, “but the body of work is so much richer.” In the interests then of shedding light on lesser told elements of his story, here Smith shares four images from the Morgan’s captivating exhibition about Hujar’s work.

Daisy Aldan, June 19, 1955

“The earliest exhibition print that we know of in all of Hujar’s work is his portrait of Daisy Aldan, which he made in June of 1955. Daisy was his high school English teacher at the School of Industrial Arts, and a classmate of his from high school told me just last month: if you were unhappy with your life and you wanted to become someone else, Daisy was the person you wanted to know. She had been a radio actor as a child, she was a poet, she was a translator of Baudelaire, she was very widely connected in literature and the arts – and she really brought Hujar into the world of culture, she’s the first adult who encouraged him in his art.

“This portrait is in a classic Avedon mode of its time, it’s really where Avedon was at that moment. In fact, just this morning, I can tell you that as I prepared to talk to you I looked at it in the gallery and I thought ‘You know, this is a kind of performance’. It’s a very gentle, intimate kind of performance, but what he’s doing is photographing somebody in action, which he seldom does later on. It’s such a striking intersection. He is channelling something very intentionally from Avedon, and the element of it that lives on in his portraiture is the simplicity of the set-up. That’s really what he got from both Avedon and Penn, I think – the idea that you leave the sitter alone.”






Greer Lankton, 1983


“Greer Lankton had had her sex-change operation four years before Hujar made this picture. She looks so fresh and so natural; to me it’s a picture that doesn’t tell you how to feel about this person. It doesn’t tell you to be suspicious about anything, about her gender identity. It’s not a gotcha picture that says ‘Ah-ha! You thought you were seeing somebody born female!’ It’s studiously neutral and yet, as glamorous in its presentation of this person as can be. In that sense, I think it’s profoundly empathetic. It’s really making gender the same kind of challenge or puzzle for us that it was for Greer.


“It’s quite a lovely portrait. She was over the moon about how the session had gone, and deservedly so.”



Hudson River, 1975

“The Hudson River picture from 1975 is one of a group of pictures of the surface of the Hudson River that Hujar made to be placed in a religious setting at Fordham University, which is a Catholic university in Manhattan. They were all in different states, and sometimes you can see clearly that the sun is reflected on a part of the water, but more often it’s quite ambiguous, as in this image. This one has the least sense of its relationship to a source of light. You have the clearest view of the water through the whole thing.

“To me, it has a Zen quality to it; it’s a very contemplative image. You could count these waves for hours. It reads as an absence of all the things that I think people associate with Hujar’s work – there’s not a person, there’s not a creature, there’s not a single thing inside the frame. It’s just the endless world of nature that you’re seeing. At the same time, he’s of course aware that it’s the Hudson River, and I think you’re seeing a little bit of a building near the pier reflected in the left foreground.

“This quality – you could call it spiritual, it’s somehow about the same kind of practice of peacefulness that a lot of the dancers and movement he photographed has about it – is something that I think is worth recognising throughout his work. He’s bringing the world to a standstill for the sake of his art form, which relies on stopping time, but at the same time recognising that things flow on.”





The Untold Stories Behind Peter Hujar’s Lesser-Known Works. By Maisie Skidmore. February 02, 2018.  AnOther Magazine


 If portrait photography is stereotypically discussed in terms of capturing something revealing or true about the sitter that can only be seen with a camera, Hujar is making an argument for another function of the portrait. He isn’t after Truth, but allowing people to be vulnerable, to share something small of their private selves. Hujar’s photographic look is tender.

I’m sure his work feels urgent to many of us right now—especially those with bodies that are marginalized and threatened—for a multitude of reasons, but it is this gentleness that stands out to me. Hujar’s photography memorializes and monumentalizes acts of tenderness and moments of vulnerability, things that lately feel less and less practicable and, for that reason, more and more important.

Why Peter Hujar’s Photos Feel So Resonant Right Now. Ashton Cooper, April 23, 2018.  ArtNet News
 
       


   
Many of Hujar’s subjects are nude, or nearly so, as though literally baring their souls or revealing their vulnerability to someone they trusted. The sittings often took hours, and Hujar in a quiet, gentle manner coaxed his subjects into relaxing and posing in unexpected ways. He even photographed himself running nude in a bare studio, young and handsome.

He had a way with form. Sometimes just body parts, legs. Or torsos, such as a reclining figure, sometimes on the diagonal. He also clearly worked instinctively, intuitively. He challenged himself to intimately explore his subjects, to tease out their secrets and their souls, through the prism of the camera lens. Back then the camera told the truth, reflecting not only the reality of the subject but also of the picture taker. The only manipulations took place in the darkroom through dodging and burning areas of the exposing paper, to lighten or darken for better effect, or by cropping the image.

Hujar printed most of his photographs himself. A black-and-white darkroom was fairly easy to assemble and maintain in a semi-domestic setting. He took great care with the process in order to create a finished print that met his standards. This included spotting the finished product himself to ensure a clean image. The vintage prints reflect this.

Hujar felt like he was the end of a photographic era—perhaps one of more formal images, intimate portraits, black-and-white prints. A younger generation came up in the 1980s and took up color and quick snaps, composed narratives, staged intimacies. And then in the future photography became ubiquitous through the smartphone, and Photoshop replaced the darkroom, Instagram the gallery.


A Formal Intimacy: Peter Hujar: Speed of Life. By Ingrid Dinter. May 11, 2018.  BOMB Magazine



Fran Lebowitz on the first time she met Peter Hujar…

“I met Peter in 1971, at a screening in Midtown. I didn’t know who Peter was, but I saw this handsome guy, and I thought ‘there is Peter Hujar’. He was very handsome, and this was one of his claims to fame. I saw this very handsome guy wearing a rough tweed jacket and a woollen sweater. When the movie was over he stood up, and he was wearing a skirt.

“This was shocking for numerous reasons. One, he wasn’t the skirt type of guy – he looked really like a librarian, in the skirt. And two, it was illegal to wear women’s clothes then, so even the people who wore them routinely, they did not do it in Midtown. This was my first view of Peter. I never saw this skirt again, but I did ask him ‘Why were you wearing a skirt, Peter?’ And he said, ‘Because one day I thought, it’s not fair: women can wear pants, why men can’t wear skirts?’ And I thought, ‘that’s the thing you think is unfair?’”

On Hujar’s theories about his lack of success…

“Peter would think of reasons he wasn’t succeeding, and they would be never the reasons why he wasn’t succeeding. For instance, in Peter’s mind he wasn’t not succeeding because he threatened to break a barstool over an art dealer’s head. He wasn’t not succeeding because (I believe) he punched a woman dealer in the face. [Rather, he believed] he was not succeeding because all successful people’s first and last names started with the same letter, like Marilyn Monroe. This was the thing he was out for, for like a year. And every time he would see you he would tell you. Those were the reasons. He would say, ‘do you think I should change my name?’ And I was saying, ‘no, I think you should change your behaviour’.

“So, we went to lunch, they were perfectly nice. And that night he went to some bar with them, and he threaten to break up a barstool over their heads, and consequently they did not give him the show. But not because his name was not Marilyn Monroe.”




On his photograph of Candy Darling on her deathbed…

“Candy asked him to do that. You know, to take that photo of her. He told me, ‘You wanna come?’ And I said, ‘Peter I don’t think you should do that. I mean Candy is dying, that’s horrible.’ Candy was young, she was 27 when she died, and even I thought that was young then, even though I was like 23. He said ‘No no, she wants me to do it,’ and she did. So we went to the hospital, someone did her make-up, her hair, and she posed for those photographs. I thought it was horrible – not the photographs, fantastic! – but I thought, I can’t imagine this is what you care about when you’re dying. But this is what she cared about.

“And then when Candy died, Peter and I went to the funeral together, which was at Frank E. Campbell, which was the fanciest funeral home in New York, still is. It was winter, and when we got to the funeral home, we went into the room where the body was, which is the first time I ever saw an open casket. The casket was open, and on the back of it – it was a very elaborate casket – there were these things, I think they’re called Mass Cards, from the Catholic Church, they were there with the rosary beads, and also these photographs of Candy, these publicity shots. Candy was in the coffin, in full drag, in full make-up. And I was shocked by this.

“Peter was wearing his coat, and he was right behind me, and all of a sudden he takes his camera and he takes a picture of it. And I was so angry at him for doing this. I said ‘This is awful!’ He goes, ‘She would have wanted me to do this!’ I said, ‘How would you know?’ And I think she probably would have, you know. I think I fought about that with Peter for about two days, and I’ve never seen that photograph of Candy dead.”

Fran Lebowitz Remembers Her Friend Peter Hujar. By Maisie Skidmore. June 28, 2018. AnOther Magazine



         

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