From Drag to Dervish
Nov 21 - Dec 21, 2019
Press release for exhibition From Drag to Dervish
Hunter Reynolds
From Drag to Dervish
November 21 – December 21, 2019
Opening Reception: November 21, 6-8 PM
P·P·O·W is pleased to present From
Drag to Dervish, an exhibition chronicling the life of Hunter Reynolds’ alter-ego
Patina du Prey through historic installations, sculptural gowns, photographs,
and performance documentation. An activist, muse, and healer, du Prey performed
throughout the United States, Western Europe and Canada during the AIDS crisis.
Whether worn on the artist’s body or presented on a male-form mannequin, du
Prey’s series of rotating, suspended or sunken dress-sculptures embody a
dual-gendered spirit.
Reynolds’ public exploration of
gender and persona was influenced by the East Village drag scene of the
mid-1980s and nights spent at the Pyramid Club. This project formally debuted
with Drag at Simon Watson Gallery in 1990. As documented in archival
footage, that exhibition centered on the portrait series Drag Pose,
photographed by Michael Wakefield, and Reynolds’ ritual transformation into du
Prey. Seated before The Vanity (1989), Reynolds publicly made himself
up, donned a dark blue taffeta dress and entered the Drag Pose Cage
(1990), where a temporarily corporeal du Prey would vogue, lounge, or speak to
viewers as part of a daily endurance performance.
For the first time ever, From
Drag to Dervish will display together The Banquet Dress (1992), Love
Dress (1994), Mourning Dress (1997), and The Memorial Dress
(1993-1997) – a revolving monument bearing the names of 25,000 people known to
have died of AIDS-related illnesses. The exhibition will also present historic
collaborations including video documentation of The Banquet (1992), a
collaboration with Chrysanne Stacathos presented at Thread Waxing Space, and I-DEA:
The Goddess Within (1993-2000), photographs by Maxine Henryson which depict
du Prey performing healing dances and radiating love in her Dervish Dress.
Throughout the 1990s, du Prey exhibited at Andrea Rosen Gallery and Stux Gallery, New York; Galeria Dziekanka, Warsaw; Espace Dieu, Paris; and Trinitatiskirche, Köln. She led Soho Art Walks, crashed the opening of the 1993 Whitney Biennial, and served as the “Mistress of Queer affairs” at The O-Party, a political convention organized by Zini Lardieri at the New Museum in 1993. In her rousing speech, which will be presented in archival footage, du Prey declaimed, “It is our responsibility to ensure change and preserve the freedom to be Other.”
Through formal performances,
guerilla actions, and collaborative projects, du Prey’s art and ideology
continue to personify progressive social values informed by systemic
oppression, internalized phobias, and the transformative power of beauty. In his
catalog essay for Drag, Gregg Bordowitz speaks to the enduring relevance
of Reynolds’ project. He writes, “This show renders open the possibility for
all viewers to do work against compulsory heterosexuality. It provides the
opportunity for viewers to divest interests in the present order of sexuality
and it invites us to take some new risks.”
Hunter Reynolds (b. 1959;
Rochester, MN)
was an early member of ACT UP and in 1989 co-founded Art Positive, an affinity
group of ACT UP that fought homophobia and censorship in the arts. He has
presented solo exhibitions at Hallwalls, Buffalo, NY; White Columns, New York,
NY; Artist Space, New York, NY; Participant Inc., New York, NY; Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA; and Hales Gallery, London. He has been
included in group exhibitions at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York,
NY; the ICA Boston, Boston, MA; Aldrich Museum of Art, Ridgefield, CT;
DOCUMENTA, Kassel; and Akademie der Kunste and Kunst-Werke, Berlin; among
others. The Memorial Dress was
recently exhibited at The Hayward Gallery in the acclaimed exhibition Kiss
My Genders. In 2017, Reynolds was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. This is
Reynolds’ third solo exhibition with P·P·O·W.