210

Nan Goldin

Cookie in the NY Inferno, from 1989: A Portfolio Honoring Artists Lost to AIDS

Estimate
$1,000 - 1,500
$2,540
Lot Details
Cibachrome print, on gloss photo paper, the full sheet.
1985/2000
S. 24 x 20 in. (61 x 50.8 cm)
Signed and numbered 75/75 in black ink on the reverse (there were also 12 artist's proofs), with stamped title on the reverse, published by The Estate Project for Artists with AIDS, a program of The Alliance for the Arts, New York, 2000, printed in the United States, unframed.

Nan Goldin

American | 1953

American artist Nan Goldin uses photography to expose the intimate and vulnerable nature of her personal life. Her photographs are raw, authentic, sexual and, at times, highly violent. Her most famous series, The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, chronicles Goldin's life during the late 1970s and '80s, following the artist through the gritty, abusive and often dangerous situations she put herself through.

The material being half-autobiographical and half-universal, Goldin attempts to depict the complexities of city living by way of diaristic practices. Having shot New York during its golden years, she has created an expansive archive of the AIDS crisis, drug abuse in the 1980s, underground culture and urban development.

Browse Artist