Comments/Context: Wild animals and nude bodies are an unlikely visual combination, and Ryan McGinley's unusual pairings of man and beast provide for some startling juxtapositions. Using exotic zoo animals and posing them with young men and women against candy-colored studio backgrounds, McGinley has made pictures that are alternately elegant and comic, but always bold and eye-catching. Bites, scrapes and even trickles of blood are evidence of the the untamed nature of this project, with feral chance clearly playing a role in the photographic outcomes.
Many of the rest of the images on view are more like jokes or one-liners, with varying degrees of harsh silliness. A bushy baby porcupine lies between a woman's legs, an albino skunk sniffs a bare bottom, a monkey's arms surround a man's torso, and countless animals nestle in crotches of men and women alike. There's even an homage to Avedon's Natassja Kinski and the Serpent, this time with an iguana doing the licking. But even in the funniest of these pairings, there is something frantic about the look in the eyes of some of these animals, a natural savageness that was held in check for just a moment. Put together with the vulnerability of the human nudes, every picture has an element of lively tension, just at the breaking point.
Collector's POV: The prints in this show are priced by size, as follows:
- 14x9: $5500
- 13x20: $7000
- 24x16: $8000
- 30x45: $14000
- 57x38: $21000
- 48x72: $25000
- 72x108: sold out
Transit Hub:
- Artist site (here)
- Features/Reviews: NY Times T magazine (here), Wall Street Journal (here), Huffington Post (here), Hint (here)
83 Grand Street
New York, NY 10013
2 comments:
I wanted so badly to hate this show but the pure guilt-free controlled beauty won me over. And I think Ryan McGinley really understands how to use color. Some of these pictures glowed and blushed in all the right ways.Thank you for your review -- it prompted me to see the show.
Yes, truly an original idea except for those other times it's been done. The absence of Natasha Kinski definitely lets the whole show down.
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