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Preview image of work. vintage gelatin silver print on paper,  Christopher Street Pier #2 (Crossed Legs) 30371

2016.8

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Christopher Street Pier #2 (Crossed Legs)

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Artist

Peter Hujar (Trenton, New Jersey, 10/11/1934 - 11/26/1987, New York, New York)

Title

Christopher Street Pier #2 (Crossed Legs)

Creation Date

1976

Century

mid-20th century

Dimensions

19 3/4 x 15 7/8 in. (50 x 40 cm)

Classification

Photographs

Creation Place

North America, United States

Medium and Support

vintage gelatin silver print on paper

Credit Line

Museum Purchase, Lloyd O. and Marjorie Strong Coulter Fund

Copyright

This artwork may be under copyright. For further information, please consult the Museum’s Copyright Terms and Conditions.

Accession Number

2016.8

The primary figure is photographed from the perspective of his crossed legs, folded in on themselves and creating a triangle through which the viewer is invited to see just a bit of a face and the hazy nondescript buildings where the city begins. Scholar Douglas Crimp has suggested that cruising characterizes all of Hujar’s photographs of the urban landscape, including images without people. I agree. But in this photograph, it is not so much about the people who may be lurking just out of the camera’s view of empty lots, but the architectural character of the body that melds into the surroundings. Returning to the legs that serve as the central object and the frame of the image, I can imagine desire but also curiosity. Why did Hujar decide to look through the legs? Did he see this perspective while strolling the boardwalk? What would happen if the figure shifted his balance and changed the way these two bent limbs folded into each other? What other shapes could Hujar see or make happen? The figure becomes another part of the receding Lower Manhattan that Hujar was so set on recording. Joseph Jay Sosa Assistant Professor of Gender, Sexuality, and Women’s Studies, Bowdoin College

Keywords: queer art   erotic   leg   pose   the body   reclining   man   ship   water   shallow depth of field