© Peter Hujar

Halloween, Two Boys, 1978
Vintage Gelant-Silver Print, 14 5/8 x 14 5/8 inches


Peter Hujar
Night



Matthew Marks is pleased to announce "Peter Hujar: Night". This exhibition will include forty-three photographs the artist made at night in New York City between 1974 and 1985, the majority of which are being exhibited for the first time.


Hujar was the quintessential New York artist, living and working in the East Village and throughout the downtown area from the age of sixteen. His urban nighttime photographs comprise a significant portion of his life's work, taking such varied subjects as Wall Street's corporate architecture, costumed Halloween partygoers, dilapidated domestic interiors, cruisy city parks, barren loading docks, and trash-strewn parking lots. Hujar photographed the World Trade Center when it was still new, the Meatpacking District when it still lived up to its name, and the West Side Highway before the coming of Battery Park City. Sometimes playful, often bleak, these photographs have an underlying sadness that is bound up in the palpable mortality of all Hujar's subjects, from late-night revelers to the shifting, often decaying urban landscape.


Enormously influential on his fellow artists, musicians, writers, and performers, Hujar was a central figure at the forefront of the cultural scene in downtown New York in the 1970s and early 1980s. His work inspired many of today's most celebrated photographers very early in their careers: among others, Nan Goldin has said she would never have become a photographer had it not been for Peter Hujar. "He was a magician", Goldin writes: "His work, like so few photographs, can't be forgotten and becomes even deeper and more compelling over time. Peter's work is not just photography - it's about birth and death and the stages of life and varieties of identity and all the friends in-between".


Peter Hujar died of AIDS in 1987. His work has been the subject of major retrospectives at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam and the Fotomuseum in Winterthur, Switzerland. His pictures are included in this winter's New Museum exhibition "East Village USA" and in the Wattis Institute's exhibition "Likeness: Portraits of Artists by Other Artists", opening in January at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, Boston.


The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue reproducing all the photographs in the exhibition and including an essay by the curator Robert Nickas.


Exhibition: January 15 - March 5, 2005
Gallery hours: Tue-Sat 10 am - 6 pm


Matthew Marks Gallery
523 West 24th Street
USA-New York, NY 10011
Telephone +1 212 243 0200
E-Mail info@matthewmarks.com

www.matthewmarks.com