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Finding Thek's Tomb

Thek's most-discussed work was his sculptural installation The Tomb (1967), which chronologically and stylistically bridged his body-part relics and immersive environments. The Tomb consisted of a one-story-high, pale pink structure reminiscent of a Sumerian ziggurat, within which lay a full-size, painstakingly crafted effigy of Thek himself. Painted pale pink, the replicant featured long hair and a moustache like Thek's own, and wore a double-breasted suit and a necklace made of human hair, as well as other jewelry. Its tongue was sticking out of its mouth, and the fingers on its right hand- Thek's working hand-were cut off, leaving bloody stumps. The fingers hung inside a pouch near the figure. (The artist was thus symbolically "silenced," unable to do his work.) In the first presentation of The Tomb, at New York's Stable Gallery in 1967, Thek surrounded the figure with pink goblets, a funerary bowl, personal letters and some of his previous reliclike work, making The Tomb resemble an archeological dig.2 On the outside of the ziggurat, Thek posted a sign that detailed the structure's measurements, medium and fabricator, mocking the literalness of Minimalism while suggesting scientific precision. (The piece is now considered one of the great lost works of the 1960s. The figure disappeared after Thek refused to accept it from a shipping company in 1982, apparently because of damage the piece had incurred in transit.) [Contact sheet for Candy Darling on her Deathbed, 1974, 11 by 81⁄2 inches. ]

In a review of the Stable exhibition of The Tomb (which eventually also became known as Death of a Hippie), Robert Pincus-Witten described the work as "a monument which may easily prove to be one of the unanticipated yet representative masterworks of American sculpture of the sixties."3 The Tomb cemented Thek's reputation-but only for a time.


THE 20 OR SO HUJAR PHOTOGRAPHS of Thek that interested Sussman were taken during the more than 20 years of the artists' friendship. The two became friends in the late 1950s and were a couple between roughly 1964 and 1967, when their relationship ended and Thek left New York to live in Europe. By 1974, Thek had disassociated himself from Hujar and much of his New York community. Early on, however, he and Hujar were inseparable. Susan Sontag's '60s circle-of which they were a part-knowingly linked them in conversation as "Peter and Paul." Peter and Paul's trip to visit the Capuchin catacombs near Palermo, Sicily, was one of the main inspirations for Thek's meat pieces and The Tomb. (The trip was also a significant turning point for Hujar; his photographs from the catacombs comprise almost a third of his only book, Portraits in Life and Death, a landmark of 1970s photography.)

Sussman expressed an interest in seeing the negatives. Stephen speculated that, in the process of locating the negatives, I might unearth the photos Peter shot of Paul at work on The Tomb, which Stephen had looked for on various occasions, to no avail. Photography of The Tomb would be particularly valu- able because there were few extant high-quality images of it.4 One such picture, taken by Hujar, of Thek working on The Tomb had been used for the poster advertising the 1967 Stable Gallery exhibition, and the Walker Art Center possesses a different view seemingly from the same shoot. Were there others?



Thek 254 East 3rd Street Studio, 1967, printed 2010 by Gary Schneider, pigmented ink print, 121⁄2 by 181⁄2 inches.






Sussman further inquired about the contact sheets of the Thek prints. It was then that Stephen and I decided it was time to get The Trunk. It took about two hours for us to locate it in the basement clutter, and then another half hour to actually open it; lacking a key, we resorted to a crowbar to pop the flimsy lock. Inside we found stacks of 8-by-10 photo paper boxes filled with contact sheets, meticulously organized by shoot. One box in particular floored me: it contained images from Peter's shoot of Candy Darling on her deathbed. In addition to the two images Peter chose to print, the sheets show Candy striking various poses in her hospital bed, looking incredibly glamorous just a few days before she died of leukemia at 29. Mixed in with the boxes of contact sheets were unmarked boxes that contained numerous 8-by-10 prints. While we had smaller versions of many of these back at the archive, we also found prints Stephen and I had never laid eyes on before.

 

Left: Shelf with Hand, 1967, printed 2010 by Schneider, pigmented ink print, 181⁄2 by 121⁄2 inches. Right: Paul Thek with Hand Sculptures, 1967, printed 2010 by Schneider, pigmented ink print, 181⁄ by 121⁄ inches.







After carting the trunk back to the office, I next discovered boxes of slides, some from Peter's fashion shoots (a financial exigency he didn't enjoy), others images of his own work that he had made for reproduction. Toward the end of the day, a bit bleary-eyed, I came upon some light blue slide boxes, a few of which were bound with a crumbling rubber band. I popped one of these boxes open, took out a slide and held it up to the light. Staring back at me, in full color, was a young Paul Thek, posing next to the figure from The Tomb. Behind this slide, in the same box and in the other rubber-banded boxes, were roughly 100 more related images. The lost shoot of Thek working on the figure of The Tomb had been unearthed.

Stephen immediately contacted Sussman. In the following weeks, she decided to include a selection of these images in the retrospective as a slide show. Stephen also determined that the archive should produce a small portfolio of them as 16-by-20-inch photographs, which would be printed by the photographer Gary Schneider, who had worked with Peter and is the only person he authorized to make posthumous prints of his work. (Thek's gallery, Alexander and Bonin, is currently exhibiting Schneider's portfolio in the exhibition "Peter Hujar: Thek's Studio, 1967." There are 14 prints in the show, each from an edition of 10. Hujar stipulated that 10 should be the size of any posthumous edition.)


HUJAR'S IMAGES OF THEK in his studio offer an astonishingly thorough documentation of The Tomb figure. They record the work in a near-completed state, from different perspectives and in great detail. One can see the figure, on the work table, in the context of the studio, with Thek making finishing touches (like finessing the hair). Hujar captures the figure close-up, from above, and from both its left and right sides. The most powerful images of the figure are point-blank views of the face, in which its verisimilitude is striking. Yet at the same time, these views encourage one to find proof of the work's artificiality, such as a bumpiness in the wax or a faint seam between the figure's neck and chest.

Moreover, the slides amount to a revealing record of Thek's East Village studio; it's almost possible to inventory the tools. Thek's small studio housed a rainbow of colors of Krylon spray paint, coffee cans full of paintbrushes, scissors, clamps, hammers and saws hooked onto the wall, hot plates for melting wax, bodies of (fake?) birds, and sheets of orange, yellow and clear Plexiglas, which Thek used to encase his "meat" and "relic" works. A few walls of the studio are covered by book and news clippings, and one immediately perceives these as possible influences on the work. Among them are photographs of grotesquely deformed twins; Michelangelo's David; Christ on the cross; diseased cells, organs and body parts; and a "Freak Monster Face" and "A Little Boy Chewed to Death" pictured in what looks like the Daily News. Hujar separately photographed some nearby bookshelves. Unfortunately, because of the shallow focus of the pictures, most of the book titles can't be made out, although Sontag's first novel, The Benefactor, can be identified.



Tomb Figure from Above, 1967, color slide


Since some of Hujar's photographs functioned as publicity shots (e.g., for the Stable Gallery poster), they also testify to the manner in which Hujar and Thek conceived presenting Thek and his work to the public. One major theme the photographs stress is the uncanny resemblance between Thek's body and his fetishistic sculptures. The images consistently juxtapose the real and the sculpted. This is especially jarring in the pictures of Thek working on the Tomb figure. The scene is incredibly strange: Thek casually fashioning a surrogate of his own body in death. One is prompted to consider if such a work-and a body of work based on casts of Thek himself-is a product of self-obsession, self-exploration or masochistic impulses. Sussman sees these photographs as taking Thek's and Hujar's interest in the dead one step further. She believes they literalize the whole activity of photography itself, if one accepts the theory put forth by Roland Barthes in Camera Lucida, that photography, while capturing life, simultaneously admits death.5

For another group from the series, Thek and Hujar arranged some of the sculptures beside the tools used to create them. They position a wax hand next to a screw- driver and a hot plate. Hujar's camera finally turns to Thek alone in his studio. Hujar shoots him from the chest up, close-up and in raking light. Thek does not smile, and in most of the images he simply turns his face to the right or left, puts his hands behind his head or leans in a bit toward the camera-toward Hujar. While these pictures are impressive in their composition, what most strikes the viewer is their suggestion of the materiality of Thek himself. Maybe this is the aftereffect of looking at all of Thek's sculptures-especially The Tomb figure-but in these images, Thek's face, body and clothing appear as waxlike as his works. These invaluable images provide a view into Thek's creative space, where he-and Hujar-questioned the divide between real and fabricated, living and dead. Although other photos Hujar took of Thek from the same period attest to a romantic connection between the two men, one wonders whether Thek's somber expression in these portraits reflects the impending demise of their relationship, even as they now give new life to Thek's seminal work.

 


1 See Harald Falckenberg, "Freedom is first of all Freedom from Identification," in Paul Thek: Artist's Artist, eds. Harald Falckenberg and Peter Weibel, Cambridge, Karlsruhe: MIT Press / ZKM Center for Art and Media Technology, 2009, p. 32. Germer's comments were originally made in Germer, "Full Fathom Five My Father Lies: Speculations About Paul Thek's Contemporaries," which was delivered at the colloquium "Hujar/Thek," Jan. 27-28, 1996, organized by the German Academic Exchange Ser- vice (DAAD) in Berlin in conjunction with the exhibition "Paul Thek-The wonderful world that almost was" at the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin.

 

2 After the installation of The Tomb at the Stable Gallery, the work was shown in the following exhibitions: "The Obsessive Image," Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (1968); "Human Concern/Personal Torment," Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1969); "Figures and Environments," Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (1970). Following the demolition of the structure, the figure was shown independently in the following exhibitions: "Pyramid/A Work in Progress," Moderna Museet, Stockholm (1971); "Ark, Pyramid- Christmas, aka Die Krippe [The Manger]," Wilhelm Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg (1973). In 1981, Thek gave permission to Kasper König to reconstruct the ziggurat; the figure and the tomb were shown that year in König's exhibition "Westkunst: Contemporary Art since 1939," Rheinhallen der Kölner Messe, Cologne (1981). The piece was then installed in "Herbs from Heaven and Hell" at the Museum voor Land- en Volkenkunde, Rotterdam (1981), which was its final exhibition.

 

3 Robert Pincus-Witten, "Thek's Tomb . . . Absolute Fetishism . . . ," Artforum, November 1967, pp. 24-25. The title Death of a Hippie was first used at the Whitney Museum in 1969. Though Thek would adopt the title, he was, in the words of Lynn Zelevansky, "at best, ambivalent" about it and "often railed against it."  See Zelevansky, "Life is Just a Bowl of Cherries: The Life and Art of Paul Thek" in Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective, New Haven, Yale University Press, 2010, p. 14.

4 The images most often reproduced of the work are two black-and-white photographs by John D. Schiff.

 

5 Elisabeth Sussman, "Photography in Life and Death: Paul Thek and Photography," in Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective, p. 30. "Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective" is at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Oct. 21-Jan. 9, 2011. It travels to the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Feb. 5-May 1, 2011, and the Hammer

Museum, Los Angeles, May 22-Sept. 4, 2011. "Paul Thek: cityscapes and other ideas" and "Peter Hujar: Thek's studio, 1967" are on view at Alexander and Bonin in NewYork, Oct. 16-Nov. 27.



MATTHEW ISRAEL is a writer based in New York.

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