Queer networks Ray Johnson's correspondence art

Miriam Kienle, 1979-

Book - 2023

"Utilizing the postal service as his primary means of producing and circulating art, Ray Johnson cultivated an international community of friends and collaborators through which he advanced his idiosyncratic body of work. Highlighting his alternative modes of community building and playful antagonism toward art world protocols, Miriam Kienle demonstrates how Ray Johnson's correspondence art offers new ways of envisioning togetherness in today's highly commodified and deeply networked world"--

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709.2/Johnson
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2nd Floor New Shelf 709.2/Johnson (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 27, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Criticism, interpretation, etc
Published
Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Miriam Kienle, 1979- (author)
Physical Description
291 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-278) and index.
ISBN
9781517911621
9781517911638
  • Introduction : Please send to
  • Singular and plural : postal network as heterotopia
  • Unsettling networks : the queer connectivity of the New York Correspondence School
  • Counterpublicity : the "exploits and escapades" of the Robin Gallery
  • Facing others : portrait of a curator as a network
  • Conclusion : Ray Johnson's dead letter.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Art historian Kienle's esoteric debut examines how queerness shaped the idiosyncratic career of artist Ray Johnson (1927--1995). Kienle focuses less on the homoerotic content of Johnson's works than the "queer" methods he employed from 1955 to 1975, including mailing his collages (which often used such "homoerotic materials" as "beefcake photos" from physique magazines) via the U.S. post office in an attempt to use the state's tools against its intentions to police queerness. In the early 1960s, Johnson obliquely protested anti-queer gentrification efforts in New York City through letters to the editor in the Village Voice that were notable for their "campy wording destabilizing gender identity" ("I had dinner last night with Snow White and the six other dwarfs and wasn't that a romp?") and "references to the escapades of queer milieu." Johnson also circulated "counterpublicity" for his imaginary Robin Gallery that aimed to foster "queer modes of belonging that resist the modern myth of a singular and unified public." Drawing liberally on critical theory (Deleuze and Foucault, among others), Kienle analyzes in diligent detail the intriguing and sometimes bizarre ways in which Johnson used his marginal status to "prank the art world from its periphery." This opens a revealing new lens on an enigmatic art world figure. (Dec.)

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