Nan Goldin (B. 1953)
Nan Goldin (B. 1953)

Jimmy Paulette and Tabboo! in the Bathroom, NYC 1991

Details
Nan Goldin (B. 1953)
Jimmy Paulette and Tabboo! in the Bathroom, NYC 1991
signed, titled, numbered, inscribed and dated '"Jimmy Paulette and Tabboo in the bathroom" NYC 1991 nan Goldin 1:25' (on the reverse)
Cibachrome print
image: 15 3/8 x 23 1/2 in. (39 x 59.7 cm.)
overall: 20 x 24 in. (50.8 x 61 cm.)
Executed in 1991. This work is number one from an edition of twenty-five.
Provenance
Private collection, New York
Literature
J. Weinberg, ed., Fantastic Tales: The Photography of Nan Goldin, London 2005, p. 24 (another example illustrated).
Exhibited
New York, The Whitney Museum of American Art., Nan Goldin: I'll Be Your Mirror, October 1996- January 1997, pp. 306-307 (illustrated).
New York, The Guggenheim Museum, Rrose is a Rrose is a Rrose: Gender Performance in Photography, January- April 1997, p. 101 (illustrated and on the back cover).

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Eliza Netter
Eliza Netter

Lot Essay

In Nan Goldin’s 1991 work, Jimmy Paulette and Tabboo! in the bathroom, NYC, features one of the artist’s most often photographed subjects, a drag queen named Jimmy Paulette. Photographed during a seminal year in the artist’s oeuvre Goldin’s photographs from this time present a photographic time capsule of a microcosm of New York City. Goldin became immediately fascinated with draq queens upon her move to New York City in the early 1970s. In her striking photographs, she sought to highlight this highly expressive and intriguing set of the New York culture.

“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. (N. Goldin, quoted in The Other Side, 2005 p.5.)

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