Peter Hujar (/ˈhuːdʒɑːr/;[1] October 11, 1934 – November 26, 1987) was an American photographer best known for his black-and-white portraits.[2][3][4][5] Hujar's work received only marginal public recognition during his lifetime,[5] but he has since been recognized as a major American photographer of the 1970s and 80s.[2][3]
Early life
Hujar was born on October 11, 1934, in Trenton, New Jersey, to Rose Murphy, a waitress, who was abandoned by her husband during her pregnancy. He was raised by his Ukrainian grandparents on their farm, where he spoke only Ukrainian until he started school. He remained on the farm until his grandmother's death in 1946, and his mother took him to New York City to live with her and her second husband in their one-room apartment.[6][7] The household was abusive, and in 1950, when Hujar was 16, he left home and began to live independently.[7]
Education
Hujar received his first camera in 1947[8] and in 1953 entered the School of Industrial Art where he expressed interest in being a photographer. He encountered an encouraging teacher, the poet Daisy Aldan (1923–2001), and following her advice he became a commercial photography apprentice.[9] Apart from classes in photography during high school, Hujar's photographic education and technical mastery was acquired in commercial photo studios, where he could use the darkroom during afterhours. By 1957, when he was age 23 he was making photographs now considered to be of museum quality. Early in 1967, he was one of a select group of young photographers in a master class taught by Richard Avedon and Marvin Israel, where he met Alexey Brodovitch and Diane Arbus.[7]
Artistic career
In 1958, Hujar accompanied the artist Joseph Raffael on a Fulbright to Italy. In 1963, he secured his own Fulbright and returned to Italy with Paul Thek, whom he had been dating since 1959,[10] where they explored and photographed the Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo, images of the dead later featured in Portraits in Life and Death.
In 1964, Hujar returned to America and became a chief assistant in the studio of the commercial photographer Harold Krieger. Around this time, he met Andy Warhol, posed for four of Warhol's three-minute Screen Tests and was included in the compilation film The Thirteen Most Beautiful Boys that was assembled from Screen Tests.
Hujar quit his job in commercial photography in 1967, and at great financial sacrifice, began to pursue primarily his own art work that reflected his homosexual milieu. He was an influential artist-activist of the gay liberation movement; in 1969, with his lover, the political activist Jim Fouratt, he witnessed the Stonewall riots in the West Village. At the urging of Fouratt, he documented the first gay liberation march (June 28, 1970), and took the now somewhat ironic photo "Come out!!" for the Gay Liberation Front..[11] After their break-up at the end of the year he had to move into his studio (on 10 East 23rd St) until mid 1972 and in spring 1973 could finally move into a loft above The Eden Theater at 189 2nd Avenue in the East Village. Formerly occupied by Jackie Curtis, Hujar transformed the space in such a way, so he could live and work there for the rest of his life.
Portraits in Life and Death
At the end of 1974 he had an exhibition at the Foto Gallery on 492 Broome St, alongside pictures by Christopher Makos, where he didn't sell any of his work, but according to a friend gained a book contract with Da Capo Press. The following months he took many portraits to include them in the book. Beside his friends like Susan Sontag, Fran Lebowitz, and Vince Aletti, he portrayed artists like John Waters, drag queen actor Divine and writer William Burroughs. In the final book published in 1976, the portraits were juxtaposed by a selection of the pictures he took of the corpses in the Catacombs of Palermo in 1963. Susan Sontag (in a hospital at the time) wrote an introduction for the sequence of 41 images of Portraits in Life and Death. The book got a tepid reception, and only later became a classic in American photography (It was reissued in 2024).
The 1980s
In early 1981, Hujar met the young artist David Wojnarowicz, and after a brief period as Hujar's lover, Wojnarowicz became a protégé linked to Hujar for the remainder of the photographer's life. Hujar remained instrumental in all phases of Wojnarowicz's emergence as an important young artist.[12]
Another artist closely linked with Hujar is Robert Mapplethorpe. Both artists were gay white men who excelled at portrait photography and who made unashamedly homoerotic work that walked the line between pornography and fine art, but they were structural opposites. If Mapplethorpe reduced his subjects to abstract forms, his sitter's faces to masks, his nude models to sculptures, then Hujar emphasized his sitters' idiosyncrasies, their irreducible qualities, their human sentience over their fleshy geometry.[13] "Orgasmic Man", one of Hujar's more memorable works, is also a key difference between his work and Mapplethorpe's; never once, in all of Mapplethorpe's editioned photographs, did he show orgasm or ejaculation nor did he depict the concomitant facial expressions.
Hujar had a wide array of subjects in his photography, including cityscapes and urban still lifes, animals, nudes, abandoned buildings, and European ruins. His photography, which was mostly in black and white, has been described as conveying an intimacy, suggestive of both love and loss.[14] One aspect of this intimate quality was Hujar's ability to connect with his sitters. One of his models was quoted after an unsuccessful session as saying:
"We couldn't ‘reveal.’ As an actor you have to reveal. And Hujar's big thing was that you had to reveal. I know that now, but I didn't know it at the time. In other words, blistering, blazing honesty directed towards the lens. No pissing about. No posing. No putting anything on. No camping around. Just flat, real who-you-are...You must strip down all the nonsense until you get to the bone. That's what Peter wanted and that was his great, great talent and skill."[11]
Hujar's portraits, the subject of the first half of the one book he published while he was alive, are simple; he almost never used props and the focus of his work was on the sitter as opposed to the backdrop of the shot. Usually, his subjects either were sitting or posing in a recumbent way.[15]
Hujar willed his estate to his lifelong friend Stephen Koch, who administers it since (today as Peter Hujar Archive).[3] A first retrospective of Hujar's work in collaboration with the estate was shown two years after his death at the Grey Art Gallery & Study Center of New York University. It was followed by a more comprehensive show in 1994 by a joined effort of the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (Netherlands) and the Fotomuseum Winterthur in Switzerland. In 2013 the Morgan Library & Museum in New York acquired a hundred prints and the entirety of his written estate and all contact sheets from the Peter Hujar Archive. A collaboration between the Morgan Library and the Spanish Mapfre Foundation enabled a major travelling retrospective exhibition that was accompanied by a comprehensive monograph published in conjunction with Aperture in 2017.
Urs Stahel, Hripsimé Visser (eds.). Peter Hujar: A Retrospective. Zurich, Switzerland: Scalo, 1994, ISBN1-881616-35-5. Foreword by Urs Stahel, texts by Hripsimé Visser, Max Kozloff, and Stephen Koch; mementos by Jean-Christophe Amann, Nan Goldin, Marvin Heiferman, John Heys, Fran Lebowitz a. o.
Linda Rosencrantz. Peter Hujar's Day, Magic Hour, 2022, ISBN978-1-63944-267-6. Transcription of the chronicle of Hujar's December 19, 1974 as told by him and recorded by Rosencrantz. Introduction by Stephen Koch.
Steve Lawrence with Peter Hujar and Andrew Ullrick (eds.). Newspaper. Primary Information, 2023, ISBN978-1-7377979-4-4. Facsimile of all 14 issues from 1969 to 1971 in one book.
Mary-Kay Lombino.Subterranean Monuments: Burckhardt, Johnson, Hujar (exhibition magazine). Poughkeepsie, NY: Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Vassar College, 2006.
Lorenzo Fusi. Changing Difference: Queer Politics and Shifting Identities: Peter Hujar, Mark Morrisroe, Jack Smith (exhibition catalogue). Milan, Italy: Silvana, 2013, ISBN978-88-366-2506-2.
This list follows the comprehensive compilation of the exhibitions of Hujar's work until 2017 provided by Joel Smith in the Mapfre/Aperture monograph Speed of Life. All solo exhibitions in his lifetime are named here, while most group shows were omitted.[21]
After his death several commercial galleries showed his work in (solo) exhibitions, like James Danziger (1991, 1992, 1998), Paula Cooper (1993, 2002), Wessel and O'Connor (1998), all situated in New York, Stephen Daiter in Chicago, Yezerski in Boston, and Berinson in Berlin (all three in 1999), Rodolphe Janssen in Brussels (1996), Renée Ziegler (1990) and Mai 36 (2002, 2010) in Zurich, and Maureen Paley and Marietta Neuss in London (both 2008). Closely engaged with the Peter Hujar Archive since the 2000s and regularly arranging shows of Hujar's work are Matthew Marks (first in 2000) and Pace/MacGill (since 2013) in New York, the Fraenkel Gallery in San Francisco (since 2002), and Maureen Paley in London (since 2008). Listed here are just the gallery shows which were accompanied by a catalogue, in addition to all solo shows in public institutions.[21]
^Smith, Joel (2017). "A Gorgeous Mental Discretion". Peter Hujar – Speed of Life. Madrid and New York: Fundación Mapfre and Aperture. p. 13f. ISBN978-1-59711-414-1.
^ abcCarr, Cynthia (2012). Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnarowicz. New York: Bloomsbury. p. 181. ISBN978-1-59691-533-6.
^"Peter Hujar". Maureen Paley (press release). Archived from the original on November 4, 2014. Retrieved November 4, 2014.
^Carr, C. (July 17, 2012). Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnarowicz. Bloomsbury USA. p. 181.
^"Paul Thek". The Mayor Gallery. Archived from the original on July 21, 2024. Retrieved October 14, 2024.
^Introductory text by Moyra DaveyArchived September 9, 2024, at the Wayback Machine on the website of Buchholz Gallery, and all works displayed, including some color photographs of Paul Thek by Hujar. Retrieved October 10, 2024.
^Salters Cottages on Gary Schneider's homepage with some filmstills from the book on the 1981 film starring Peter Hujar a. o.
^ abJoel Smith with Martha Scott Burton (2017), "Exhibitions and Bibliography", Peter Hujar: Speed of Life, Madrid and New York: Fundación Mapfre and Aperture, pp. 239–241
^ abAccording to a listing compiled by the Fraenkel Gallery and provided as a Pdf. Retrieved October 9, 2024.
^Introductory text by Moyra Davey on the Gallery's website, installation views and all works displayed, including some color photographs of Paul Thek by Hujar. Retrieved October 10, 2024.
^"Peter Hujar: Speed of Life". The Morgan Library & Museum. January 11, 2017. Archived from the original on March 1, 2019. Retrieved February 28, 2019.