Untitled

Untitled

David WojnarowiczWW-1983-044539

<p>David Wojnarowicz was identified by <em>The New York Times</em> critic, Michael Kimmelman, in 1992 as &quot;one of the most influential artists of the 1980s.&quot; Wojnarowicz first emerged in the context of the brash and brief burst of energy that took place in New York’s East Village in the beginning of the 1980s. Fusing the aesthetics of the punk-music scene, a keen awareness of an ethnically diverse street culture, and a committed sense of political activism, Wojnarowicz’s earliest works were often informal and ephemeral. The 1980s East Village scene in which Wojnarowicz thrived produced a number of artists who went on to broader recognition, including Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, Jenny Holzer, and Jean-Michel Basquiat. His paintings, photographs, installations, performances, and experimental films are distinguished by raw expressions of rage and personal longing. Wojnarowicz’s work, most often concerned with the inequities and disenfranchisement of living with HIV and AIDS, ranged from the intentionally shrill to the elegiac. A gifted writer, the poignant beauty of his vision is perhaps best glimpsed through his published journal excerpts, short stories, and autobiographical essays. Indeed, the artist is now widely recognized for the strength of his artistic expression both in the visual arts and with the written word. The artist died of AIDS in 1992 at the age of thirty-eight.</p>

Catalogue

Year
1983
Dimensions
121 × 182 cm (48 × 72 in.)

Artist

David Wojnarowicz
David Wojnarowicz

Photography

David Wojnarowicz was an American artist, filmmaker, and activist who worked across photography, painting, collage, and text to create urgent political interventions. His practice merged autobiographical narrative with documentary urgency, addressing homelessness, queer identity, and the AIDS crisis during the 1980s and early 1990s. Working in New York, he combined found materials, spray paint, and personal testimony in works that refused aesthetic distance from social catastrophe. His films and installations remain defining documents of postwar American dissent.

Red Bank, NJ, USA

Full artist profile →

More

More by David Wojnarowicz

View all →
Untitled (Sometimes I Come to Hate People)

Untitled (Sometimes I Come to Hate People)

1992 · Silver print with silkscreened text

WW-1992-044525
Untitled (Face in Dirt)

Untitled (Face in Dirt)

1991 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1991-M112247
Untitled from "Sex Series"

Untitled from "Sex Series"

1990 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1990-M044633
Untitled from "Sex Series"

Untitled from "Sex Series"

1990 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1990-M044654
When I Put My Hands on Your Body

When I Put My Hands on Your Body

1990 · Gelatin silver print and silkscreen text on museum board

WW-1990-044523
Untitled (One Day This Kid...)

Untitled (One Day This Kid...)

1990 · Gelatin silver print

WW-1990-044537

Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
1983
Dimensions
121 × 182 cm (48 × 72 in.)
Watts ID
WW-1983-044539

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

David Wojnarowicz

David Wojnarowicz

Photography

View artist profile →