THINGS: a queer legacy of graphic art and play

Curt McDowell, Tom Rubnitz, and Robert Ford with Seth Bogart, Rafa Esparza, Aimee Goguen, and Brontez Purnell

Exhibition hours: Thursday-Sunday, 1-5pm; Closed Monday-Wednesday
Find location, hours, and parking information for this off-site exhibition below.

Opening reception: September 17, 2016, 7-9:30pm
Walkthrough of THINGS with Seth Bogart and Bradford Nordeen: Sunday, December 11, 2016, 3pm

THINGS: a queer legacy of graphic art and play presents objects made by artists best known for their work in journalism, performance, film, and video. Drafted during moments of leisure and distributed largely through social means, the paintings, drawings, and printed matter collected in THINGS harness the quiet radicality of their activist origins. From the hyper-sexualized drawings and comics of filmmaker Curt McDowell, to the ‘60s revisionist wall reliefs and high gloss paintings of video artist Tom Rubnitz, through music journalist and AIDS columnist Robert Fordʼs underground Black culture ‘zine THING, the tactics on display carry through to a younger generation whose object-making bolsters or elaborates the artists’ primary, time-based practices. Contemporary artists Seth BogartRafa EsparzaAimee Goguen, and Brontez Purnell each evince the intensely vital and political potential of craft. Through expressive self-portraiture, utopian world-making, and scene-charting ‘zine cultures, the historical and contemporary artists assembled in THINGS each reflect on the world as it appears or is perceived at immensely personal moments of artistic reflection.

THINGS: a queer legacy of graphic art and play is curated by Bradford Nordeen. The exhibition is presented by ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries, the ONE Archives Foundation, and PARTICIPANT INC in collaboration with Visual AIDS. Special thanks to the City of West Hollywood.

 

Bios

“Curt was curt, cute, controversial, and not celibate,” wrote friend and collaborator George Kuchar. Curt McDowell worked in San Francisco from the late 1960s until his death in 1987 – a period that witnessed the Summer of Love, gay liberation, and the onset of HIV/AIDS, to which he succumbed at the age of forty-two. The producer of numerous films that recast the American dream of plenty in pansexual terms, McDowell, like so many artists of his generation, indulged in the era’s carnal abundance, and his appetites and experiences are reflected in his work, which alternates between the revealing and the puerile. His short films, such as Weiners and Buns Musical (1972) and Loads (1980), celebrate sex as well as genre-riffing and autobiographical narratives (McDowell’s insatiable desire for seducing straight men is explicitly documented in his 16-mm works), and bear the influences of Jack Smith’s lush, DIY, camp aesthetic, Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s explosive melodrama, and Nan Goldin’s glimpses of countercultural bohemia. McDowell exhibited his work in illustration and painting during one, 24-hour exhibition during his lifetime.

Over the course of the 1980s and up until his untimely death from HIV/AIDS related complications in 1992, Tom Rubnitz captured the personalities and energy of the East Village scene in his loony, anarchic, and hallucigenically-colored short videos. Screwball TV broadcasts from an alternate reality, these videos take the form of cooking shows, music videos, or kids shows, featuring downtown artists like Ann Magnuson, and drag legends-in-the-making RuPaul, the Lady Bunny, and Hapi Phace. As Amy Taubin wrote, Rubnitz’s “glitter-dusted videos distill the sensibility of a generation of TV babies whose venue of choice was the Pyramid Club rather than the Whitney Museum.” Rubnitz and his demented TV takeoffs live on in the YouTube era, with the ever-popular Pickle Surprise racking up over two million views and inspiring fan remixes and remakes. Rubnitz maintained a fine art studio practice and in SoHo and was included in various exhibitions, including a three-person show at Artists Space in 1980.

Robert Ford was a freelance journalist, publisher, and activist born and raised in Chicago. Creative Director of Rose Records, Ford was a frequent contributor to local publications like Jam Sessions, Chicago Music Magazine, Jazzgram in addition to maintaining regular columns in Planet Rock and Babble. His groundbreaking African-American-focused AIDS column ran in Pulse magazine until the time of his death in 1993. Ford collaborated with Trent Adkins and Laurence Warren to found Think Ink, an arts magazine that was, “very Black, not very gay but queer-friendly.” The publishing trio unleashed THING into the world shortly thereafter. Running from 1989-1993, THING— “She Knows Who She Is”—became legendary in ‘zine communities, with distribution quantities ultimately rising to 3,000. Ford announced the final THING after the publication of the 10th issue, in order to focus on freelance writing projects.

Seth Bogart is a multi-disciplinary artist living in Los Angeles. Last year he had his first solo exhibition, The Seth Bogart Show, in Los Angeles at 356 S. Mission Rd. He likes creating immersive worlds filled with paintings, video, sculpture, and music. He was a member of the bands Gravy Train!!!! and Hunx and His Punx and this year released the first album under his birth name. His first ‘zine, Puberty Strike, was released in the late ‘90s, followed by Psycho No. 1 Fan. He also runs a clothing line and store called Wacky Wacko.

Rafa Esparza was born in 1981 in East Los Angeles. Esparza studied at East Los Angeles College before transferring to UCLA. His intermedia performance practice spans installation, sculpture, drawing, and painting. Esparza has exhibited work at a variety of sites, including traditional fine art contexts, such as Made in L.A. at the Hammer Museum and the MexiCali Biennial at the Vincent Price Art Museum, and community-based platforms as well as outdoor public locations that he has independently seeks out and organizes.

Aimee Goguen is a video artist, object-maker, and experimental animator who received her BFA and MFA from CalArts. Over the past five years, Goguen’s work has screened internationally at venues like REDCAT, Anthology Film Archives, ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, Night Gallery, and Periwinkle Cinema, in addition to numerous stints at the Druid Underground Film Festival. She has performed in video work by Harry Dodge and provided animated sequences for William S. Burroughs: A Man Within (2010).

Brontez Purnell has been publishing, performing, and curating in the Bay Area for over ten years. He is author of the cult ‘zine Fag School, frontman for his band The Younger Lovers, and founder and choreographer of the Brontez Purnell Dance Company. He was formerly a dancer with Gravy Train!!!, a queer electro indie band that gained national prominence in the mid-2000s. He earned a BFA in Theatre and Contemporary Dance at California State University, East Bay, just published his first novella, Johnny Would You Love Me (if My Dick Were Bigger) with Rudos and Rubes, and will publish a second novel, Since I Laid My Burden Down…, with the Sister Spit imprint of City Lights Books.

Location, Hours, and Parking

THINGS: a queer legacy of graphic art and play is presented in the Long Hall at West Hollywood’s Plummer Park, the same location where ONE presented KillJoy’s Kastle: A Lesbian Feminist Haunted House. The Long Hall is located north of the Plummer Park Community Center and south of the parking lot off North Vista Street. The exhibition will be open to the public Thursday-Sunday, 1-5pm (Closed Monday through Wednesday). During gallery hours an exhibition attendant will be available at 323.546.9299.

Parking in Plummer Park is located in two lots, one off Santa Monica Boulevard and another off North Vista Street. Street parking is also available.

Date
Sat, Sep 17 - Sun, Dec 11 2016
Address

Plummer Park, Long Hall
1200 North Vista Street
West Hollywood, CA 90046
United States