Nan Goldin

Misty and Jimmy Paulette in a taxi, NYC

1991

Not on display

Artist
Nan Goldin born 1953
Medium
Photograph, dye destruction print on paper mounted on board
Dimensions
Image: 695 × 1015 mm
Collection
Tate
Acquisition
Purchased 1997
Reference
P78046

Summary

This is a large colour photograph of two drag queens known as Misty and Jimmy Paulette. Goldin has photographed them close-up, sitting next to each other inside a taxi. They are framed against the taxi's rear and side windows, through which other yellow New York taxis are visible. The drag queens stare directly at Goldin's camera, aimed at them from the taxi's front seat. They are cropped just below breast level. The camera's flash has illuminated and accentuated their heavy makeup and shiny clothes. Misty wears a light blue wig, big heart-shaped silver earrings and a pvc-textured sleeveless top stretched tight over large fake breasts. Jimmy Paulette's costume includes a streaked blonde wig, a white stretchy-net top and a gold bra, the straps of which have fallen off his shoulders. White padding visible in one of the bra cups and two large holes in the front of the white net confer a sleazy edge to this glamour. Goldin first encountered drag queens in 1972 and quickly became obsessed. She explained:

I was eighteen and felt like I was a queen too … they became my whole world.
Part of my worship of them involved photographing them. I wanted to pay
homage, to show them how beautiful they were. I never saw them as men dressing
up as women, but as something entirely different - a third gender that made more
sense than either of the other two. I accepted them as they saw themselves; I had
no desire to unmask them with my camera.
(Quoted in The Other Side, p.5.)

In the early 1970s Goldin and her gay friends were inspired by the camp decadence portrayed in such artists' films as Jack Smith's Flaming Creatures 1961. Their social lives revolved around glamorous dressing up in order to live out the fantasy of reconstructed identities. Goldin's earliest photographic work in black and white comprises portraits of room-mates and close friends transformed through the effects of drag glamour. Goldin photographed them at home and in The Other Side, the bar in her home town of Boston which was frequented by drag queens. She developed her personal, spontaneous snapshot aesthetic in this environment following the precedent of Hungarian-born George Brassai (1899-1984) who photographed Paris night club scenes in the 1920s. This initial series of images was interrupted when Goldin went to study art at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 1974. Throughout the 1980s, while she was living in New York, Goldin continued to socialise with and photograph people of ambiguous gender, although her main work during this period, documented in The Ballad of Sexual Dependency 1981, was about the difficulty of heterosexual relationships. In 1990 she began a new series of images. She recalled: 'I met a whole new crowd of queens in N.Y. in 1990 … My old obsession was reawakened. I developed one fixation after another. I photographed my new friends constantly … After years of experiencing and photographing the struggle of the two genders with their codes and definitions and their difficulties in relating to each other, it was liberating to meet people who had crossed these gender boundaries.' (Quoted in The Other Side, p.6.) Misty and Jimmy Paulette in a taxi, NYC, like Jimmy Paulette and Taboo! undressing, NYC 1991 (Tate P11513), is part of a large series of colour photographs of glamorous drag queens taken in New York, Paris and Berlin in 1991. These are compiled with other photographs of people of ambiguous gender in Goldin's third published book, named after the Boston bar, The Other Side. Goldin has said: 'I've met other women who are infatuated with queens and transsexuals but I still haven't found a definition. There is a sense of freedom in having a desire that has never been labelled. As a bisexual person, for me the third gender seems to be the ideal.' (Quoted in The Other Side, p.7.)

Further reading:
Nan Goldin: I'll be your Mirror, exhibition catalogue, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 1996, reproduced (colour) p.309
Nan Goldin, The Other Side, Manchester, England 1993, reproduced (colour) pp.58-9

Elizabeth Manchester
December 2001

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Display caption

Goldin photographed a group of her friends preparing for the New York City Pride March. This picture was taken in a cab as they headed uptown to join their float. Since the 1970’s Goldin has photographed many drag queens and transexual friends that she has been close to. She sees the work as an homage to their beauty and courage. Goldin has said that ‘the people in these pictures are truly revolutionary. They are the real winners of the battle of the sexes because they have stepped out of the ring.’

Gallery label, November 2019

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Technique and condition

A cibachrome photograph printed on high gloss resin coated paper, which has been drymounted to a sheet of foam core board. The print is signed and dated with the title inscribed on the verso. The print is in mint condition.

Calvin Winner
September 1998

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