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Ivy wearing a fall, Boston

1973 photograph by Nan Goldin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ivy wearing a fall, Boston
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Ivy wearing a fall, Boston is a 1973 photograph on 35 mm film by the American photographer Nan Goldin. Depicting Goldin’s close friend Ivy with head turned back, it is one of the many black-and-white photographs that Goldin took of her friends between 1972 and 1974. A gelatin silver print measuring 19.875 in x 15.875 in (50.5 cm x 40.3 cm) was purchased by Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York in 2002.

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Nan Goldin in 2009

Goldin started taking black-and-white photographs as a teenager in Boston, before she moved to New York City in 1978.[1] Goldin had no prior formal education in photography, and she was heavily influenced by fashion photography in French and Vogue Italia, especially Guy Bourdin and Helmut Newton, Andy Warhol’s early films, Federico Fellini, and Larry Clark.[2][3] Her celebratory black-and-white photographs of drag queens prefigure her later signature cibachrome work such as The Ballad of Sexual Dependency.[4][5]

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When she was 19, Goldin lived in downtown Boston where she began documenting her life in the subcultural community she made home.[4] It was during her time there that her interest in photography solidified.[2] She frequented The Other Side, a drag bar, where she became acquainted with the drag queens and transsexuals who later became the principal subjects for her photographs.[6]

In this photograph, Ivy is in drag with a long-haired wig cascading behind her, epitomizing the sexual freedom and gender fluidity that Goldin admired.[5] Goldin has said that she wanted to show respect and honor drag queens by portraying them as a “third gender, as another sexual option, a gender option.”[2]

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