MUSÉE 29 – EVOLUTION

Evolution explores the concepts of progress, transformation, growth, and advancement in an age when images are taking a dramatic shift in the role they play in our lives.

WANTED: Peter Berlin at ClampArt

Image above: © Peter Berlin/ Courtesy of ClampArt, NYC

 

ClampArt presented “WANTED: Peter Berlin” - an exhibition of self portraits from the 1970s and early 1980s - on September 10th, 2015.  More than forty years ago, Peter Berlin created some of the most recognizable gay male erotic imagery of the time, which quickly established him as an international sensation.

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Images above: © Peter Berlin/ Courtesy of ClampArt, NYC

 

Born in Poland in 1942 as Baron Armin Hagen von Hoyningen-Huene, he is a relative of the celebrated fashion photographer George Hoyningen-Huene (1900-1968).  Raised in Germany, Peter Berlin received post-secondary education as a photo-technician, and in his early 20s worked as a celebrity portraitist for German television.  However, it was around this time that he curiously began designing and sewing his own skin-tight clothing which he would wear as he cruised the parks and train stations in Berlin, Rome, Paris, New York, and San Francisco.  After several long-term stays on the east coast of the United States, Peter Berlin eventually moved to San Francisco in 1969, and became a fixture on the steep streets with his signature look and perpetual posing.

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Images above: © Peter Berlin/ Courtesy of ClampArt, NYC

 

Aside from his role in the sexual revolution and helping make gay men and gay sexuality more visible to the public at large, Peter Berlin was responsible for the definition of many gay archetypes which persist today, while contributing to the achievement of artistic legitimacy for erotic gay subject matter, in general.

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Image above: During the opening night at ClampArt. © Paul McLaren.

 

Berlin’s photographic project is arguably closer to performance art, in that the act of cruising in his elaborate getups was the ultimate point of his ambitious pursuits.  The expertly composed and printed photographs, gorgeous art objects in and of themselves, are ultimately records of his sexually pointed happenings.

As he grew older, Peter Berlin’s public cruising became less frequent, and now younger generations seem less aware of his large contribution to gay history.  But, in 2005 Jim Tushinski directed and co-produced That Man: Peter Berlin, which helped spawn a resurgence of interest in and appreciation for Berlin’s work.  “WANTED: Peter Berlin,” the exhibition at ClampArt, is mounted with the motivation to further support that comeback.

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Image above: During the opening night at ClampArt. © Paul McLaren.

 

Peter Berlin resides in San Francisco quietly today, where he is still frequently recognized on the sidewalks by his fans. His photographs are represented in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, as part of the Robert Mapplethorpe archive (Mapplethorpe and Sam Wagstaff collected Peter Berlin’s work); in addition to The Kinsey Institute at Indiana University in Bloomington.

The exhibition is co-curated by Eric Smith and Mark Garrett.

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