(한국어) “I don’t really think of that work as erotic. I think of the body almost as an object.”
—Jimmy DeSana on his series Suburban (1979–84)
The Queer photographer Jimmy DeSana worked in New York from 1973 until his premature death from an AIDS-related illness in 1990. No wave music, club culture, performance art, the Pictures Generation, mail art: not only was DeSana a prominent figure in these scenes, he also became a chronicler of Queer New York subculture in the 1970s and 1980s through his photographs. For the first time in Asia, Meyer Riegger, Seoul presents a solo exhibition with works from all phases of his brief but prolific career.
With a series of 56 black-and-white lithographs, titled 101 Nudes, DeSana obtained a degree in art from Georgia State University in 1972. This graduation project already highlights the themes that would preoccupy DeSana throughout his oeuvre, and which, until his AIDS diagnosis in 1985, he would regard mostly with humour: the body, sex, objectification and submission – almost always in a domestic setting. For 101 Nudes, DeSana photographed his friends inside a typically American detached suburban home. In unusual positions, their naked bodies appropriate objects as symbols of the bourgeois lifestyle. They seem to have stealthily infiltrated the meaning-giving order of the American Dream in which middle-class post-war American society has ensconced itself.
A year after graduating, in 1973, DeSana moved to New York. He began sending his photographs to members of the mail art network, and the following year the Canadian collective General Idea featured DeSana’s photographs in their magazine FILE, which would go on to play a central role in the publication of DeSana’s work.[1] Alongside his freelance activities in New York, DeSana also undertook commissions for album covers (such as Talking Heads’ More Songs about Buildings and Food, 1978); took photographs for magazines and later made portraits of prominent cultural figures, such as the artist Laurie Simmons, the singer Debbie Harry and the Beat Generation writer William S. Burroughs. The other major series of his oeuvre were all created in the city: Submission (1977–79), the Dungeon Series (1978–79) and Suburban (1979–84).
Published in 1980, Submission is a volume of 29 photographs illustrating sadomasochistic sex practices. Together with Robert Mapplethorpe, DeSana thus brought depictions of gay sex into the public sphere. Immediately after Submission, DeSana began Suburban, a series that continued his exploration of domestic environments featuring naked people, but now in lurid colours rather than black and white. DeSana used artificial light and colour filters for these works and photographed the subjects’ bodies from strange angles and in twisted poses. Apart from his portraits, DeSana did not name his photographs after the naked models, but after the objects on or with which they assume their unusual poses.
After DeSana received his AIDS diagnosis in 1985 and became progressively weaker, he restricted his subject matter but continued to work obsessively: he now focused on almost abstract images of objects such as candlesticks, as well as human faces. As curator Elisabeth Sussman wrote in an essay, the 1970s were the last decade in which erotic hedonism was not associated with the danger of infection[2] – an unknowledge that signified great freedom for the Queer scene, but was also constantly being challenged or even made impossible by social exclusion and hostilities, up to and including violent police attacks, a threat faced by gay men like DeSana at the time. His oeuvre is an aesthetically captivating negotiation of the subversive power of the Queer body between the poles of freedom and restriction, life and death.
[1] See Antje Krause-Wahl, “(Un)Sichtbar werden: Körper in den Fotografien Jimmy DeSanas”, 21: Inquiries into Art, History and The Visual, 3/4 (2022), p. 876.
[2] Elisabeth Sussman, “Jimmy DeSana: Erotic Miniaturist”, in Dan Nadel und Laurie Simmons (eds.), Jimmy DeSana: Suburban, p. 87.