Monday 26 October 2009

God Only Knows Why My Trip Never Ended

"PAUL STEINITZ : God Only Knows Why My Trip Never Ended"
2009-08-11 until 2009-09-06
Moscow Museum of Modern Art
Moscow, , RU Russian Federation



Moscow Museum of Modern Art and BrainStorm Management present an unprecedented exhibition of the legendary Paul Steinitz – photographer, visual artist and publisher, known by all and by no one. Paul Steinitz, whose silhouette reminds both of an incredibly flamboyant artist and an impoverished vagabond, has been an obscure legend of the Paris and New York underground of the last two decades. To gain proof of it, one needs only to flick through the copies of Amaan Magazine that he has published since the mid-90s. On its pages are writers, filmmakers, designers, and top models – everyone Paul Steinitz photographed was transformed by his vision and later earned international recognition.


Many friends of Paul Steinitz have already passed away, including artists Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, designers Stephen Sprouse and Willie Smith, and DJ Larry Levan. Likewise, the notorious New York hangouts have disappeared – Palladium, Paradise Garage, Club USA, Save the Robots, Jackie 60, and Limelight – but Steinitz managed to conserve their ambiance in his works. It was in Limelight that Paul met his producer Zak Kaghado who works with the artist intensely in Paris and now brings his show to Moscow.

Moscow Museum of Modern Art presents various works from the series of black-and-white and colour portraits shot in Paris and New York using the large-format film. Paul claims to have kept to the same style in photography since the age of 25. The technology of platinum hand prints reveals great stylistic effects and permanently redefines the aesthetics of Steinitz based on fundamentals such as Hollywood glamour and Expressionist cinema. Conjugating the sublime and the street, Paul Steinitz denounces the lies of money, power and sexuality to go off in constant search of the time lost.

Paul’s latest exhibition was held at the London White Cube Gallery in 2008. His portraits were on view next to the works by of Damien Hirst, Julian Schnabel, and Cindy Sherman. Aged 41, Paul has two children; he lives and works in Paris, New York, and London.

Of the 25 years spent creating thousands of portraits, Paul Steinitz has no regrets: “I haven’t learned anything and every image will remain my greatest orgasm.”

In this exhibition, the rising star artist Ja’bagh Kaghado will be collaborating with Paul Steinitz. Ja’bagh is no newcomer to the Moscow Museum of Modern Art, where he was the youngest photographer to be commissioned a major solo show in August 2008. Ja’bagh who has been having a busy year exhibiting, recently presented another personal show “The Obsession of…” at the M’ARS Center for Contemporary Art within the framework of the Fashion & Style in Photography Festival 2009. He has just returned from Amman where his exhibition “Moskva Raw Meets Amman” created quite a stir up at the National Gallery of Fine Arts. Ja’bagh returns to the Moscow Museum of Modern Art with his new Parisian series “Faces in the Shadow”.

Thursday 5 June 2008

-WHITE CUBE

White Cube in London, next to the work of Anselm Keifer, Damien Hirst and Cindy Sherman.

Wednesday 4 June 2008

-LIFELINE

He’s a man known by all and by no one. A silhouette both devilishly flamboyant and impoverished vagabond, recognizable among thousands. Pinstriped suit, silk tie and a dandy’s panama hat, a hip-hop assembly of medallions and khakis or hobo techno street-wear, Paul Steinitz has been an obscure legend of the Paris and New York underground these past two decades.
On need only leaf through copies of the Amaan magazine he’s published since the mid-90s. Writers, filmmakers, designers, top-models, everyone he has photographed has been transfigured by his vision, before having distinguished themselves in their respective fields and earn international recognition.

A constant: his “infinite love” of all women. The first star of his Factory, his first “ negative goddess” was a Japanese girl sitting on a washing- machine at the corner of avenue B and 7th street. Her name is Lena Shirai, exuberant feline, neighbor of Madonna, head designer of jewelry for Matsuda and Comme des Garcons, ambassador in Japan for the most avant—garde New York fashion designers – including Willi Smith dead of Aids before the age of twenty-five- and who introduces him to Paradise Garage.

It would be too exhausting to list them all because from Tel Aviv to New York where he opened art galleries- the Prisunic Gallery in the Meat Market opened in 1986 with his brother and showed Stephen Sprouse- to Moscow whose underground life he recently documented in “Ebyan Magazine, Moscow Rules”, Paul Steinitz has rendered thousands of them sublime.

Sometimes for very long periods of time when it was a matter of his long time collaborator Christine Mingo met on the corner or 14th street or the love of his life and mother of his children, Ebyan Steinitz, Saint-Laurent and Givenchy model, Somalian born who introduced him to the magical world of Haute Couture. He describes himself as “degenerate” and “schizophrenic”, “ a lost and irresponsible being” wearing out everyone around him because he doesn’t know how to stop questioning normality, to verify each second that he doesn’t belong to the world of reasonable people his worst fear, because forgetting reality is his “greatest passion”. Will he end up like the Toulouse Lautrec of the Bret Easton Ellis years or their Fassbinder? The Bukowski of the Britney Spears decade or its Sid Vicious?

He claims to have taken the same portrait since the age of 25, but an examination of his work- orientalist chromes printed in platinum to ripoline gangsta shots - reveal and great stylistic richness, and a permanent redefinition of his esthetic starting with fundamentals like Hollywood glamour or expressionist cinema. To conjugate the sublime and the street to denounce the lies of money, power, sexuality, to go off in search of lost time and continuously questioning what is left of images, such is the life of Paul Steinitz. A sparkling voyage, a Golgotha of excess, through generosity. Too full of life, too hungry for love and a recognition that neither prizes or articles in neither magazines, nor decorations could fill.

The first shot he takes is that of a Christian gravestone at the top of an Israeli cliff, balancing between the earth and the Mediterranean Sea. An authentic epiphany originating in the requirement of infinite repetition in its search for permanent instability. A fertile search that produced other images and explosive texts summoning the most eclectic references in a logic of intertextuality-Modigliani and David Bowie, CNN and Rita Hayworth, Eric von Stroheim and Paul Morrissey- the only way of taking into account the communicational world, of accepting the disappearance of a petrified world of values and culture, doing everything so that it doesn’t die out completely. So Paul Steinitz has only a few friends, Abel Ferrara, his New York double in artistic fever, fashion designers, princes and some of those excluded from the system, splendid unknowns to share modern absinthes with, and more women who bid farewell clad in lingerie, naked in the snow. Of his 25 years spent producing and taking thousands of photos, he has no regrets; “I haven’t learned anything and every image will remain my greatest orgasm”.

This is perhaps the reason why some travel across the globe to be photographed by this artisan and poet of the image who haunts bars, in and why he is exhibited such prestigious galleries as White Cube in London, next to the work of Anselm Keifer, Damien Hirst and Cindy Sherman.

Wednesday 14 May 2008

--------------------------CONTACT--------------------

+p.steinitz@gmail.com+