Fever, Allen Frame, 2021

Fever

Allen Frame

2021

MATTE Editions

Introduction by Drew Sawyer, Curator of Photography at the Brooklyn Museum
500 copies, 152 pages, 50 color photographs and ephemera

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A deluxe edition of 25 copies includes a signed 4x6 digital chromogenic print of Bob, George, Bill, Charlie, and Zamba at Jones Beach,
1981.

Please visit the publisher's site for availability: MATTE Editions.


Frame moved to New York from his home in Mississippi in 1977 and began to photograph friends he knew from his college days in Boston and others he was meeting. By 1981, he had a circle of artist friends that he photographed in his apartment, their studios, on beaches, and on the streets of New York, including the artists Charles Boone, Darrel Ellis, Frank Franca, Robert Gober, Nan Goldin, Dan Mahoney, Frank Moore, Cady Noland, Kevin Teare, Ken Tisa, Jane Warrick, David Wilson, and Zamba.

Though Frame had previously worked mostly in black and white, in 1981, he photographed extensively with color. In an article on this work in the Winter 2021 issue of Aperture, Brendan Embser writes:

“He used available light, gentle ochres and greens, the faint shade of blue when sky is indistinguishable from water. He composed his frames with beguiling precision, with just-off symmetry and split-screen scenes demarcated by paintings or doorjambs.”

At the end of the book, Frame interviews eight of the artists who are still living about that period in New York. As he notes in his essay,

“Many of the men in these pictures died of AIDS: Bill, Charlie, Darrel, Dan, Coco, John West, Frank Moore, Tom Reeder, Bob Applegarth. It is heartbreaking to contemplate them. We were full of joy and hopefulness about our lives, about what we would accomplish creatively, about our close-knit relationships. For all of us, finding like-minded friends and lovers in a city with so many possibilities like New York was something we had yearned for. In 1981, AIDS had not yet entered our lives directly, though we had read the first reports of its appearance. Within a few years, we were all part of its devastation.”

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