Hunter Reynolds and Dean Sameshima’s Memorials to Queer Loss
A two-person, intergenerational display represents two drastically opposed approaches to queer history. by Qingyuan DengSubscribe to our newsletter
Or Sign in to an existing accountPrivacy Policy
Success! Your account was created and you’re signed in.
Please visit My Account to verify and manage your account.
An account was already registered with this email. Please check your inbox for an authentication link.
This dual exhibition often operates at the register of biographical reading, while simultaneously resisting full clarity, due to both artists’ strategies of presenting ephemera as evidence and traces of queerness as sites of emotional truth. For instance, working both along and against the grain of contemporary modes of grievance (think, “say their names”), Reynolds’s “Ray Navarro’s Bed of Mourning Flowers” (1990/2018) pays tribute to the eponymous video artist who dressed up as Jesus outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral to protest the Catholic Church’s conservative teachings on sexuality through what are presumably photoprints of Navarro’s funeral flowers. Appendages of mourning are similarly given prominence in the adjacent “Felix Bead Curtain” (2018), an assemblage of light and shadow studies of Félix González-Torres’ bead curtain installations about experiences of battling AIDS and approaching death.
Get the latest art news, reviews and opinions from Hyperallergic.
Elsewhere, biographical details are elided in favor of documentation of more general truths. Reynolds’s “Moon Over Gerhard (FTL Bear Daddy Beach)” (2004) transforms the sexual bravado of cruising into abstract photography capturing auras of utopian desire via a grid of long exposure shoots of road signs, neon lights, and the moon above a beach. And Sameshima’s abstractions of his experiences of visiting gay porn theaters in Berlin in works such as “Anonymous Berlin Stories” and “Anonymous Blue Movie” (2024) feel like shrouded biography: half hidden, half revealed.
Hunter Reynolds / Dean Sameshima: Promiscuous Rage continues at PPOW (392 Broadway, Tribeca, Manhattan) through January 25, 2025.The exhibition was organized by the gallery.
We hope you enjoyed this article! Before you keep reading, please consider supporting Hyperallergic’s journalism during a time when independent, critical reporting is increasingly scarce.
Unlike many in the art world, we are not beholden to large corporations or billionaires. Our journalism is funded by readers like you, ensuring integrity and independence in our coverage. We strive to offer trustworthy perspectives on everything from art history to contemporary art. We spotlight artist-led social movements, uncover overlooked stories, and challenge established norms to make art more inclusive and accessible. With your support, we can continue to provide global coverage without the elitism often found in art journalism.
If you can, please join us as a member today.Millions rely on Hyperallergicfor free, reliable information. By becoming a member, you help keep our journalism free, independent, and accessible to all. Thank you for reading.
Become a member