Contradictions come up as quickly as one walks into PPOW’s storefront area on Broadway. Berlin-based Dean Sameshima’s “Anonymous Illness” (2024), a portray of the titular phrases that refuses to call the illness it alludes to, is paired with late activist-artist Hunter Reynolds’s “Quilt of Names (panel 2)” (1992), during which numerous angles of documentation of the AIDS Memorial Quilt in Washington, DC thread are collectively, explicitly naming these the illness rendered victims. Within the context of a two-person, intergenerational exhibition solid from the shadows the devastatingly poorly managed HIV/AIDS epidemic forged upon conceptions of queer sexuality, the side-by-side show represents two drastically opposed approaches to remembering the illness.
Sameshima refuses to spell out his referent: The bigger font of “illness” in comparison with “anonymous” emphasizes evasive generality, satirizing the Reagan administration’s silence and fearmongering ways. Quite the opposite, Reynolds acutely understood that naming is commonly a political gesture: AIDS’s many victims, rendered nameless or obscure exactly as a result of mourning victims undermined the state’s heteronormative agenda, are explicitly named in his woven photograph tapestry of c-prints of AIDS memorial quilts. An early member of ACT UP, the artist infused low materials and the performative dimension of language with militant vitality to counter the state’s official reminiscence tradition, which threatened to deflate a plenitude of loss into impersonal statistics. Collectively, the 2 works sign to viewers that they’re strolling into an exhibition transferring between that which is explicit and common in queer expertise and the incessant gaps between the 2.
Dean Sameshima, ”Nameless Sickness” (2024), acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, 11 3/4 x 15 3/4 inches (30 x 40 cm) (photograph: Ian Edquist; courtesy the artist; Tender Opening, London and PPOW, New York)
This twin exhibition typically operates on the register of biographical studying, whereas concurrently resisting full readability, because of each artists’ methods of presenting ephemera as proof and traces of queerness as websites of emotional reality. As an example, working each alongside and towards the grain of latest modes of grievance (suppose, “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 outdoors St. Patrick’s Cathedral to protest the Catholic Church’s conservative teachings on sexuality by means of what are presumably photoprints of Navarro’s funeral flowers. Appendages of mourning are equally given prominence within the adjoining “Felix Bead Curtain” (2018), an assemblage of sunshine and shadow research of Félix González-Torres’ bead curtain installations about experiences of battling AIDS and approaching dying.
Elsewhere, biographical particulars are elided in favor of documentation of extra basic truths. Reynolds’s “Moon Over Gerhard (FTL Bear Daddy Beach)” (2004) transforms the sexual bravado of cruising into summary pictures capturing auras of utopian need through a grid of lengthy publicity shoots of highway indicators, neon lights, and the moon above a seaside. And Sameshina’s abstractions of his experiences of visiting homosexual porn theaters in Berlin in works resembling “Anonymous Berlin Stories” and “Anonymous Blue Movie” (2024) really feel like shrouded biography: half hidden, half revealed.
Hunter Reynolds, “Felix Bead Curtain” (2018), photo-weaving, chromogenic prints and thread 75 1/2 x 45 1/2 inches (191.8 x 115.6 cm) (photograph by Ian Edquist; courtesy the Property of Hunter Reynolds and PPOW, New York)
Dean Sameshima, “Anonymous Blue Movie” (2024), acrylic and silkscreen on canvas 11 3/4 x 15 3/4 inches (30 x 40 cm) (photograph by Ian Edquist; courtesy the artist; Tender Opening, London and PPOW, New York)
Hunter Reynolds, “Moon Over Gerhard (FTL Bear Daddy Beach)” (2004), photo-weaving, chromogenic prints and thread 52 x 59 1/2 inches (132.1 x 151.1 cm)
Hunter Reynolds / Dean Sameshima: Promiscuous Rage continues at PPOW (392 Broadway, TriBeCa, Manhattan) by means of January 25, 2025. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.