TILLMAN, PAULA GATELY. Paula Gately Tillman Papers, 1986-2013

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

TILLMAN, PAULA GATELY. Paula Gately Tillman Papers, 1986-2013 TILLMAN, PAULA GATELY. Paula Gately Tillman papers, 1986-2013 Emory University Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library Atlanta, GA 30322 404-727-6887 [email protected] Descriptive Summary Creator: Tillman, Paula Gately. Title: Paula Gately Tillman papers, 1986-2013 Call Number: Manuscript Collection No. 1265 Extent: .25 linear foot (1 box) and 1 oversized papers boxes (OP) Abstract: Papers of photographer Paula Gately Tillman, including photographs and printed material. Language: Materials entirely in English. Administrative Information Restrictions on Access Unrestricted access. Terms Governing Use and Reproduction All requests subject to limitations noted in departmental policies on reproduction. Source Gift, 2013. Citation [after identification of item(s)], Paula Gately Tillman papers, Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University. Processing Processed by Sarah Quigley, August 2013. This finding aid may include language that is offensive or harmful. Please refer to the Rose Library's harmful language statement for more information about why such language may appear and ongoing efforts to remediate racist, ableist, sexist, homophobic, euphemistic and other oppressive language. If you are concerned about language used in this finding aid, please contact us at [email protected]. Emory Libraries provides copies of its finding aids for use only in research and private study. Copies supplied may not be copied for others or otherwise distributed without prior consent of the holding repository. Paula Gately Tillman papers, 1986-2013 Manuscript Collection No. 1265 Collection Description Biographical Note Paula Gately Tillman is a photographer, known in part for her work documenting the New York City and Atlanta, Georgia, club scenes of the 1980s. Scope and Content Note The collection consists of the papers of photographer Paula Gately Tillman from 1986-2013. The records are comprised primarily of photographs and printed material, including three photographs of RuPaul in Atlanta in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as photographs of the cast of the American Music Show and of Tillman herself. Printed material includes clippings, exhibition announcements, fliers, and art catalogs documenting Tillman's work as well as the work of other artists. Also present is one piece of writing by Tillman: her comments for the celebration marking New York University's acquisition of Nelson Sullivan's video archive. Arrangement Note Arranged by record type. 2 Paula Gately Tillman papers, 1986-2013 Manuscript Collection No. 1265 Container List Photographs by Tillman Box Folder Content OP1 2 Jack, Betty, "Betty Jack on the Set of The American Music Show," 1995 1 1 Richards, Dick, 2001 1 2 Richards, Dick, "Dick Richards and Cast on the Set of The American Music Show," 1995 OP1 3 Richard, Dick and Duffie [cast member of The American Music Show], 1996 1 3 Peek, DeAundra, no date OP1 4 Peek, DeAundra, The DeAundra Peek TV Show, 1995 OP1 1 RuPaul, Atlanta, 1988 OP1 1 RuPaul, Atlanta, 1992 OP1 1 RuPaul, "Bad Ass," 1986 1 4 "Stick and Ellen," Club Rio (Atlanta, Georgia) staff, 1987 1 5 Thackston, King, 1992 1 6 Tillman, Paula Gately, self-portrait, circa 2000 1 7 Tillman, Paula Gately, "Self-portrait in Salzburg," 1996 [photo postcard] 1 8 Tillman, Paula Gately with owner of "Gallery 291 (Atlanta, Georgia)," 1987 Printed material by and about Tillman 1 9 Art Festival of Atlanta catalog, 1996 1 10 Art Papers, 1991 [2 issues] 1 11 Clippings, 1997-2008 1 12 Printed material, other, 1996-1997 1 13 RuPaul, "Home for the Holidays" flier, 1990 [photographs by Tillman] 1 14 Tillman, Paula Gately, exhibition announcements and catalogs, circa 1987-1995 1 15 Velvet two year anniversary celebration invitation, 1993 [featuring photographs by Tillman] Writings by Tillman 1 16 Comments for celebration in honor of Nelson Sullivan's video archive being acquired by New York University, 2013 3.
Recommended publications
  • Queer. Nelson Sullivan (I)
    Diarios sin piedad. Los ochenta: queer. Nelson Sullivan (I) Proyectamos en la sesión de hoy cuatro piezas, todas de 1989, que ofrecen Del Sur profundo a la efervescente Gran Manzana un primer acercamiento a su universo: Nelson Sullivan nació en una vieja familia de clase media-alta del Sur Monologue For TV Show (10 min). Nelson anda con su perro en uno de profundo de los Estados Unidos, en Kershaw, Carolina del Sur, en el sus paseos por la ciudad. Por primera y única vez se dirige a los hipotéticos año 1948. Después de graduarse en la universidad, se traslada a Nueva espectadores del primer capítulo del «Nelson TV Show», que nunca tendrá York a principios de los setenta con la idea de dedicarse a la música y a la secuela alguna. composición y con el deseo de huir de los prejuicios y de la claustrofobia propias de la vida en las pequeñas ciudades sureñas del país. Como tantos Nelson Goes to the Red Zone (29 min). Nelson ha sido invitado a una otros jóvenes homosexuales de su generación que emigraron hacia grandes discoteca con motivo de la presentación de una colección de moda, pero el centros urbanos, Nelson desea experimentar formas de vida más liberadas. portero, que no lo reconoce, le impide el paso. El mal humor de Nelson le Este fenómeno de éxodo se dio a conocer como «ola post-Stonewall», en vuelve chistoso y corrosivo. referencia a las violentas protestas que se produjeron, tras repetidas redadas policiales, en las calles de Nueva York en 1969 y que pasaron a la historia Gay Day Parade (26 min).
    [Show full text]
  • Fort Gansevoort
    FORT GANSEVOORT A Look Back: 50 Years After Stonewall Opening On: Thursday, July 11, 6 – 8 PM July 11 – August 10, 2019 Fort Gansevoort presents A Look Back: 50 Years After Stonewall, organized by Lucy Beni and Adam Shopkorn. The exhibition commemorates the fiftieth anniversary of the 1969 Stonewall Uprising, a six-day riot said to have been spontaneously set off by Marsha P. Johnson in protest of one of many regular police raids at The Stonewall Inn, a gay bar located in New York City’s Greenwich Village. This event marks the beginning of the Gay Liberation movement and the contemporary fight for LGBTQ+ rights in the United States. A Look Back: 50 Years After Stonewall unites the work of queer artists living and producing in and around New York City beginning around the time of the Stonewall Uprising in 1969 and leading into the 1980s. This is only a portion of the story, an incomplete history, most especially given that the Gay Liberation movement and its coinciding contemporary art market had not placed transgender voices nor people of color at the forefront of the conversation. The exhibition includes both documentation of the Gay Liberation movement and a look back at the work made by LGBTQ+ artists during this time. Central to the work included are the subjects of protest, revolt, celebration, and love. Kate Millett’s sculpture, American Flag Goes to Pot (1970) provides a blunt protest to government authority, while Joan E. Biren’s photograph’s document the tenderness of love between two women. The work made during the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, beginning in 1981, becomes entangled in death and remembrance, an epidemic defining this decade most especially in the New York City queer community and resulting in a tremendous amount of loss.
    [Show full text]
  • Club 57 Gallery Screening Schedule
    An in-gallery projection space is central to the evocation of Club 57’s basement space in the Museum’s Titus 1 gallery. Weekly rotating programs feature a selection of films and videos, most of which were acquired and preserved by MoMA in conjunction with the exhibition. Included are performance documentation, music videos, Manhattan cable television programs, and Super8 films. All works in the collection and preserved by The Museum of Modern Art unless otherwise indicated. The weekly rotation schedule is subject to change. October 31–November 5 Week 1: Opening Compilation November 6–12 Week 2: Videos by Keith Haring People in the Elevator, 1980. Video (black and white, sound), 5:36 min. Now Now Now. 1978. Video (black and white, sound), 3:23 min. Tribute to Gloria Vanderbilt (Take Two). 1980. Video (color, sound), 3:19 min. He Said I Have a Dream. c. 1979.Video (black and white, sound), 11:42 min. Video Tapes for Two Monitors. c. 1979. Video (black and white, sound), 5:50 min. Painting Himself into a Corner. 1979 Video (black and white, sound), 30 min. Courtesy the Keith Haring Foundation. Program approx. 60 min. November 13–19 Week 3: At Home in the East Village Andy Rees. Fashion portrait. c. 1978. Digital video from Super 8mm (black and white, silent), 3:30 min. Andy Rees. New Wave Vaudeville and East Village home movies. c. 1978 [developed 2016]. Digital video from Super 8mm (black and white, silent), 15 min. Tessie Chua and Sur Rodney (Sur). The Scary Truth About Cockroaches and Landlords. 1980.
    [Show full text]
  • Joseph Deleon
    Social Media at the Margins: Crafting Community Media Before the Web by Joseph Richard DeLeon A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Film, Television, and Media) in the University of Michigan 2021 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Daniel Herbert, Co-Chair Associate Professor Sheila Murphy, Co-Chair Assistant Professor Sarah Murray Professor Lisa Nakamura Joseph Richard DeLeon [email protected] ORCID iD: 0000-0003-1662-9033 © Joseph Richard DeLeon 2021 Dedication This dissertation is dedicated to my parents, Carol DeLeon and Richard DeLeon. ii Acknowledgements This dissertation is the result of the community and support that shaped my doctoral education in so many important and life-changing ways. I have had the incomparable joy to benefit from great mentors who have fostered my intellectual growth from my first steps on campus all the way to my dissertation defense. To my co-chairs, Dan Herbert and Sheila Murphy, thank you for guiding me through this project and for helping me to harness the strengths of my research, my perspective, and my voice. Thank you to Dan, who has always offered a helpful listening ear and shared a wealth of advice from choosing seminars, to networking, publishing, and finishing a dissertation. Thank you to Sheila for your constant support and encouragement of my writing, my teaching, and my curiosity. I thank Sheila for the many conversations that spurred my writing in new and fruitful directions and that made me feel valued as a scholar and as an individual. I am especially grateful for Sheila’s advice for my research trips to Silicon Valley and for encouraging me to witness Fry’s Electronics firsthand.
    [Show full text]
  • CP Resource Guide FINAL.Indd
    Visual AIDS Founded in 1988, Visual AIDS is the only contemporary arts organization fully committed to HIV prevention and AIDS awareness through producing and presenting visual art projects, while assisting artists living with HIV/AIDS, and preserving the work of artists with HIV/AIDS and the artistic contributions of the AIDS movement. Day With(out) Art In 1989, to make the public aware that AIDS can touch everyone, and to inspire positive action, Visual AIDS presented the fi rst Day Without Art — organizing museums and art institutions nationwide to cover up their artwork, darken their galleries, and even close for the day — to symbolically represent the chilling possibility of a future without art or artists. Since then, Day With(out) Art has grown into a collaborative project in which organizations worldwide present exhibitions, screenings and public programs to highlight work by HIV+ artists and artwork addressing current issues around the ongoing AIDS pandemic. Visual AIDS presents To learn more about Visual AIDS programs, please contact us COMPULSIVE PRACTICE for the or visit us online at visualaids.org 27th anniversary of Visual AIDS 526 West 26th Street, Suite 510 Day With(out) Art New York, NY 10001 (212) 627-9855 / [email protected] COMPULSIVE PRACTICE is a video compilation of compulsive, daily, and habitual practices by nine artists and Facebook: visualAIDS activists who live with their cameras as one way to manage, Instagram: visual_AIDS refl ect upon, and change how they are deeply affected by Vimeo: visualAIDSnyc HIV/AIDS. Featuring Juanita Mohammed, Ray Navarro (1964–1990), Nelson Sullivan (1948–1989), the Southern AIDS Living Quilt, James Wentzy, Carol Leigh aka Scarlot Harlot, Luna Luis Ortiz, Mark S.
    [Show full text]
  • City Guide Magazine Random Happenings In
    FORT GANSEVOORT Random Happenings in New York City This Weekend - August 2-August 4 By CG Directory Editor July 29, 2019 A Look Back: 50 Years After Stonewall unites the work of queer artists living and producing in and around New York City beginning around the time of the Stonewall Uprising in 1969 and leading into the 1980s. This is only a portion of the story, an incomplete history, most especially given that the Gay Liberation movement and its coinciding contemporary art market had not placed transgender voices nor people of color at the forefront of the conversation. The exhibition includes both documentation of the Gay Liberation movement and a look back at the work made by LGBTQ+ artists during this time. Central to the work included are the subjects of protest, revolt, celebration, and love. Kate Millett's sculpture, American Flag Goes to Pot (1970) provides a blunt protest to government authority, while Joan E. Biren's photograph's document the tenderness of love between two women. The work made during the beginning of the AIDS epidemic, beginning in 1981, becomes entangled in death and remembrance, an epidemic defining this decade most especially in the New York City queer community and resulting in a tremendous amount of loss. Peter Hujar, Paul Thek and David Wojnarowicz's work all reflect this tragic time. Highlighted in the exhibition is the work of Nelson Sullivan, who throughout the 1980s lived at 5 Ninth Avenue where Fort Gansevoort is now located. Sullivan passed away in 1989. Nelson Sullivan documented queer New York City in the 1980s through a dedication to filming everything.
    [Show full text]
  • About Last Night
    Matthew Terrell about Nelson Sullivan 2019-06-19 | page 1 About Last Night Nelson Sullivan’s camcorder videos of 1980s queer New York are a rare cultural treasure. By Matthew Terrell Published in SLATE on June 19, 2019 at 9:49 AM https://slate.com/human-interest/2019/06/nelson-sullivan-videos-queer-new-york.html Photo illustration by Lisa Larson-Walker. Still from a film by Nelson Sullivan courtesy of the 5 Ninth Avenue Project and Good Dog Blackout LLC. This piece is part of the Legacies issue, a special Pride Month series from Outward, Slate’s home for coverage of LGBTQ life, thought, and culture. The artifacts of queer history are often unassuming: an album of snapshots from a drag show, say, or back issues of the Village Voice. To some, these may seem like trivial scraps; indeed, it wasn’t until recently that major institutions like museums and libraries saw fit to preserve them. If we have any archives of such materials to rifle through and learn from today, it’s usually due to the unappreciated, obsessive work that certain driven individuals put into documenting the people and scenes of our queer past. Nelson Sullivan was one such hero. Thirty years ago, Sullivan released the first episode of a cable access show featuring video he shot of the underground queer community in New York City. A day after his first episode aired, he died. He left behind thousands of hours of unaired footage of drag shows, parties with gay icons, and scenes of 1980s Manhattan. These tapes are now in the care of the Fales Library at New York University, and they constitute some of the most thorough documents of queer history at a pivotal and challenging time.
    [Show full text]
  • Drag Queens and Farting Preachers: American Televangelism, Participatory Media, and Unfaithful Fandoms
    Drag Queens and Farting Preachers: American Televangelism, Participatory Media, and Unfaithful Fandoms by Denis J. Bekkering A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Religious Studies Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2015 © Denis J. Bekkering 2015 Author’s Declaration I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract Studies of religion and fandom have generally considered sincere devotion a fundamental point of contact between the two cultural phenomena, an assumption not reflected in fan studies proper. This dissertation aims to expand the scope of research on religion and fandom by offering cultural histories of “unfaithful” fan followings of three controversial American televangelists – Robert Tilton, Tammy Faye Bakker/Messner, and Jim Bakker – dating from the 1980s to 2012, and consisting of individuals amused by, rather than religiously affiliated with, their chosen television preachers. It is argued that through their ironic, parodic, and satirical play with celebrity preachers widely believed to be religious fakes, these unfaithful fans have engaged in religious work related to personal and public negotiations of authentic Christianity. Additionally, it is demonstrated that through their activities, and in particular through their media practices, these fans have impacted the brands and mainstream representations of certain televangelists, and have provoked ministry responses including dismissal, accommodation, and counteraction. iii Acknowledgements Family comes first. My wife Erica is the main reason that this project has been completed.
    [Show full text]
  • Downtown's Queer Asides
    City University of New York (CUNY) CUNY Academic Works Publications and Research Brooklyn College 2015 Downtown's Queer Asides Lucas Hilderbrand Alexandra Juhasz CUNY Brooklyn College Debra Levine Ricardo Montez How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! More information about this work at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/bc_pubs/187 Discover additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu This work is made publicly available by the City University of New York (CUNY). Contact: [email protected] Chapter 18 Downtown's Queer Asides Lucas Hilderbrand, Alexandra Juhasz, Debra Levine, and Ricardo Montez Introduction: Alexandra Juhasz The golden age of Downtown film is in black and white. Punk kids pose on rooftops with graffiti they just painted as backdrop, the city spilling out across the horizon. Everyone's high and poor and an artist. The films do not record a way of living as much as manifest it. Arriving to the Lower East Side as I did in 1986, these films, and the performances, paintings, and bars that they conjured, were still happening - although I felt uninvited and unwanted and largely disconnected from this scene - and so, like so many others before me, I worked with others to make another Downtown. Ours is in pix.elated, colour camcorder video and features gay men and women in meetings, marches, and mourning: a different golden age, the same Downtown streets. One city, many maps. My Downtown houses graduate school at New York University (NYU), HIV rife across newly intersecting communities, and political/theoretical art and living practices that become AIDS activist video and the new queer cinema.
    [Show full text]
  • NELSON SULLIVAN Biography Beyond the Confines of Downtown New York Nelson Sullivan Wasn't Particularly Famous, but Within Its Bo
    NELSON SULLIVAN biography Beyond the confines of downtown New York Nelson Sullivan wasn't particularly famous, but within its boundaries (from 14th Street to Houston Street and from 5th Avenue to Avenue D) everyone knew Nelson because almost every night he was going out and documenting his surroundings. During the last ten years of his life he shot over 1800 hours of tape, capturing himself and his friends in the glossy facade of Manhattan's Downtown life that has been perpetuated in urban legend. Sullivan chronicled the rise and fall of many of his friends and peers including Michael Musto, RuPaul, Dean Johnson, Deee-lite, Ethyl Eichelberger, Sylvia Miles, Michael Alig and countless other denizens of a demimonde being ravaged by AIDS, heroin, and anomie. Nelson himself died tragically from a heart attack on July 4, 1989- only three days after quitting his full time to so that he could produce his own cable television show of his footage. Originally from a grand old family in the deep south, Nelson moved to downtown New York in the early seventies to escape the prejudice and claustrophobia of small town life. As a classical pianist and composer, he also came to New York to make it. But no sooner had he arrived than he noticed that Downtown Manhattan was the mecca where everyone came to make it - not just from all over the country but also from all over the world; 'If I can make it here, I'll make it anywhere' as Frank Sinatra sings in 'New York, New York'. a portrait of downtown Nelson knew, because he was witness to it, that Downtown was a new society being born.
    [Show full text]
  • How Reality TV Reimagines Perceptions of American Success
    DePaul University Via Sapientiae College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences 6-2016 That's Ru-volting! how reality TV reimagines perceptions of American success Megan M. Metzger DePaul University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd Recommended Citation Metzger, Megan M., "That's Ru-volting! how reality TV reimagines perceptions of American success" (2016). College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations. 209. https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd/209 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THAT’S RU-VOLTING! HOW REALITY TV REIMAGINES PERCEPTIONS OF AMERICAN SUCCESS A Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts June, 2016 BY Megan M. Metzger Department of Interdisciplinary Studies College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences DePaul University Chicago, Illinois ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author would first like to thank her thesis advisor, Dr. Kelly Kessler, for her guidance and patient prodding throughout this process, which was often challenging, sometimes humbling, and always rewarding. She would like to extend this gratitude to the rest of her thesis committee, Dr. David Gitomer and Dr. Allison McCracken, for their sound assessments that the author will keep in mind as she continues her journey from “super fan” to media critic.
    [Show full text]
  • AMERICAN MUSIC SHOW (TELEVISION SHOW) American Music Show (Television Show) Video Recordings, 1981-2005
    AMERICAN MUSIC SHOW (TELEVISION SHOW) American Music Show (Television show) video recordings, 1981-2005 Emory University Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library Atlanta, GA 30322 404-727-6887 [email protected] Descriptive Summary Creator: American Music Show (Television show) Title: American Music Show (Television show) video recordings, 1981-2005 Call Number: Manuscript Collection No. 1256 Extent: .5 linear feet (1 box) and AV Masters: 19.5 linear feet (20 boxes) Abstract: Video recordings of the American Music Show, an Atlanta, Georgia, public access television program that ran from 1981-2005. Language: Materials entirely in English. Administrative Information Restrictions on Access Special restrictions apply: Use copies have not been made for audiovisual material in this collection. Researchers must contact the Rose Library at least two weeks in advance for access to these items. Collection restrictions, copyright limitations, or technical complications may hinder the Rose Library's ability to provide access to audiovisual material. Terms Governing Use and Reproduction All requests subject to limitations noted in departmental policies on reproduction. Source Gift of Dick Richards, David Goldman, and Potsy Duncan, 2013. Custodial History Dick Richards was the creator of the American Music Show. Along with Richards, David Goldman and Potsy Duncan were producers of the show. Citation [after identification of item(s)], American Music Show (Television show) video recordings, Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University. Emory Libraries provides copies of its finding aids for use only in research and private study. Copies supplied may not be copied for others or otherwise distributed without prior consent of the holding repository.
    [Show full text]