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ANTHONY FRIEDKIN
Gay, A Photographic Essay 1969 - 1972
June
20th -August 2nd, 2009
Reception for the artist Saturday, June 20th, 7-10pm
complimentary valet parking
Hustlers,
Selma Avenue, Hollywood 1971
11x14 Vintage Silver-gelatin print
drkrm.gallery
is pleased to announce the exhibition of Anthony Friedkin's
Gay, A Photographic Essay 1969 - 1972
in commemoration of the 40th Anniversary of the Stonewall
Riot and Gay Pride month. The exhibit will be on view at the
drkrm. gallery from June 20th to August 2nd, 2009. There will
be a reception honoring the photographer on Saturday June
20 from 7-10pm.
This retrospective exhibition of photographs about the Gay
community revisits work done by celebrated Los Angeles based
photographer Anthony Friedkin. This powerful and important
set of vintage photographs, over 35 years old, historically
documents what was then the emerging identity of the homosexual
community, and the beginnings of the Gay Liberation Movement.
First displayed in a Los Angeles exhibit in 1973 and later
again in 1994 it's been over fifteen years since these unique
and beautifully printed vintage photographs have been on view.
In
1969 when he was still a student, Friedkin embarked on The
Gay Essay. A series of pictures made in Los Angeles and
San Francisco that is the first extensive record of the Gay
communities in these cities. This work is an early example
of the influence of Diane Arbus outside NY, examining as it
does the underbelly of a vibrant and yet marginalized community.
The Gay Essay functions as a time capsule and a valuable
historic record of a fiercely proud community struggling for
acceptance and integration.

Divine,
Palace Theatre, San Francisco 1972
11x14 Vintage Silver-gelatin print
The essay shows Gay men and women both proudly and intensely
living an openly Gay lifestyle. "They were defining their
sense of freedom and individuality," says Friedkin, who
choose at the time to portray Gay people who refused to conform
to society's values. "I wanted to depict their struggles,
humiliations, and their triumphs."
The images in the exhibit depict a wide-ranging composite
of gay life: young hustlers, drag queens, transsexuals, San
Francisco entertainers; a Gay Liberation parade in Hollywood;
two lesbian women very much in love; effeminate boys growing
up in an environment of machismo and the religious subculture
typical of East Los Angeles. Also included are portraits of
of Gay activists Morris Kight and Don Kilhefner, Troy Perry,
a Gay cleric, standing among the burned-down remains of his
downtown church after a suspected arson fire. A reviewer from
San Francisco's Artweek said of Friedkin's original
1973 exhibit: "The Gay Essay is comparable in
magnitude to Robert Frank's 'The Americans'...the exhibit
in its entirety is amazingly strong. And for the most part
the photographs are singularly beautiful in execution."
Dan,
Male prostitute, San Fernando Valley,1972
11x14 Vintage Silver-gelatin print
The essay was published in Europe long before it was published
in the United States, due to the American media's reluctance
to deal with the images of a sensitive nature and the homosexual
issue in general. Re-exhibiting The Gay Essay today
close to forty years after it came into existence, powerfully
illustrates and preserves a crucial period in the Gay community's
history.
A
native of Los Angeles, Anthony Friedkin began photographing
as a child. He started working in the darkroom at age eleven,
processing and printing his own images. Since that time, which
was in the early 1960's, he has accomplished a significant
body of work. His photographs are included in major Museum
collections: New York's Museum of Modern Art, The
J. Paul Getty Museum and others. He is represented in
numerous private collections as well. His work has been exhibited
world wide and has been published in Rolling Stone, Zoom,
Time, Newsweek. and many others.
Friedkin uses his camera as a means of personal discovery.
His full frame black & white photographs explore the many
mysteries of moments in time. He creates his own distinctive
exhibition prints in his darkroom. He says of his work, "I
believe in extraordinary photographs that draw you in and
cannot be easily defined-celebrating perception and its many
hidden layers of reality."

Vice Police interrogating two men, Hollywood, 1972
11x14 Vintage Silver-gelatin print
Informed by the works of Atget, Kertesz, and Josef Koudelka,
he moves gracefully among disparate worlds--from surrealistic
sets of Hollywood to the shores of the tempestuous Pacific
Ocean. Julian Cox, from the Department of Photographs at the
J. Paul Getty Museum, writing in the introduction
of Friedkin's photographic Art book Timekeeper, said,
"He captures and creates beauty for its own sake, but
he also chases life's more elusive mysteries, The best of
his pictures are outre, edgy fragments of life, emitting sparks
of electricity that increase in wattage the more closely we
examine what's there."
drkrm, in cooperation with the Steven Cohen Gallery is proud
to present this historic and groundbreaking body of work.
PR
CONTACT: Jay Lopez 213.595.7419
jay@jaylopez.net
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