Barbara Ess – Archives

September 12–October 21, 2023
A forward-facing view of a large black and white photographic print of a woman in a dress holding a baby in her lap. The baby’s arms are outstretched and it gazes upwards, seemingly in awe. There is a sentence on the wall to the right of the piece printed in beige that reads “HAVE YOU EVER EXPERIENCED ECSTASY?”

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

Frontal view through a brick archway within a gallery. To the left of the arch hangs two small pieces. One is a reflective portrait of a woman’s face with X’s over the eyes. The other is writing on a sheet of  8.5 by 11” white paper. Looking through the archway on the wall straight ahead is a photograph of Barbara Ess playing the bass. On the wall to the right is a large photographic print of a woman holding a baby.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

Forward-facing view of a gallery. In the vitrines closest to the viewer are 23 pieces of ephemera related to Barbara Ess’ exhibitions. On the wall with the archway hangs 10 pieces of varying themed works. Towards the back are two rows of vitrines. One row stands against the wall and one extends through the gallery at an angle. On the wall behind both vitrines, 12 posters from various music performances hang on the wall, all varying in size, color and content. In front of the wall to the right are two vitrines holding a variety of material, behind it are 4 wall pieces.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An angled view of a gallery. The vitrine nearest to the viewer holds material related to Barbara Ess exhibitions. On the freestanding wall to the right are various writings, photographs and a poster of an eye surrounded by text that reads WAC IS WATCHING / WOMEN TAKE ACTION. In front of this wall are vitrines encased with varying material related to the wall pieces. There are multiple vitrines towards the back of the gallery. On the back wall behind the vitrines are 13 posters relating to musical performances.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An angled view of two gallery walls meeting at a corner. In the vitrine nearest the viewer are 11 copies of various issues of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall to the left hang 9 pieces, 7 of which are various writings by Barbara Ess. 2 are work prints. The adjacent wall holds 7 posters relating to musical performances. In front of the wall are several more vitrines.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An angled view of a gallery. Three vitrines stand at an angle in front of a white column, inside each one is material relating to the zine Just Another Asshole. Behind the white pillar are multiple vitrines standing against the back wall. Hanging on the back wall are 13 posters all varying in size, color and content. The wall to the right holds three smaller pieces.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

A forward-facing view of a gallery. Nearest to the viewer is an angled vitrine holding a variety of material from issues 6 and 7 of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall straight ahead are 12 pieces hung with varied spacing. The two on the far left are self portraits of Barbara Ess; the rest are writings on yellow notebook paper and white printer paper.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An angled view of several walls in a gallery. Nearest to the viewer are 4 vitrines, each displaying exhibition ephemera. The free-standing wall in the middle holds a collection of 23 framed photographs hung in 4 rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Behind the freestanding wall is a line of the angled vitrines, and another row of vitrines against the back wall. On the wall farthest from the viewer hangs 13 colorful posters.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

A frontal-facing view of the gallery. On the wall to the left are a pair of writings on yellow notebook paper and two larger mounted photographic works leaning on a small white shelf mounted to the wall. Straight ahead are 4 vitrines standing in front of several large windows. Hanging on the freestanding wall to the right are a collection of 23 smaller framed photographs hung in four rows.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

A forward-facing view of a freestanding gallery wall. Hanging on the wall are a collection of 23 small framed photographs hung in four rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Most of the photographs are of Barbara Ess, while some images are drawn from her artwork.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

A forward-facing view of a gallery wall. On the left of the wall are two pieces of handwritten notes on lined yellow paper. To the right of those pieces are two larger mounted photographs leaning against the wall on a mounted shelf. The first piece is a highly contrasted black and white image of several dogs. The second piece is a diptych of watery reflections next to a high-contrast image of a baby with its eyes half closed.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole, including copies of Just Another Asshole issues 1 through 3 and a poster for a Just Another Asshole Benefit at the Mudd Club.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole issues 6 and 7. These include copies of issues 6 and 7, an invitation to the release event for issue 6, a newspaper clipping by Vince Aletti, the original album cover from which the cover image for JAA #6 was drawn, and more.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An overhead view of a vitrine containing material from various exhibitions at White Columns in the early ‘80s in which Barbara Ess participated. These materials include exhibition posters, postcard invitations, and letters from the artist Susan Hiller to Ess, etc.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

An overhead view of a vitrine. On the left half of the vitrine are materials relating to an organization of photographs by Ted Serios, organized by Barbara Ess and others, including an annotated exhibition brochure. On the right are materials relating to Ess’ questionnaire Artists and $, such as two pieces of paper that read ARTISTS AND $ and a copy of a questionnaire “about the relation of money to the lives, priorities and attitudes of creative artists.”

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023.

A vignetted photograph of a woman using tarot cards while seated at a wooden table. Next to her is a glass of wine and a cigarette in an ashtray. Towards the bottom edge of the photograph, the tarot cards become distorted and appear to stretch out towards the viewer.

Barbara Ess, Portrait of Cookie Mueller, n.d, photograph, 8 × 10 in. © Estate of Barbara Ess. Courtesy of the Estate of Barbara Ess and Magenta Plains, New York.

Press Release

White Columns is proud to present Barbara Ess – Archives. Featuring materials drawn from the artist’s estate, the exhibition is a partial account of the life and work of Barbara Ess (1944-2021), a hugely influential and mercurial artist who was a photographer, musician, publisher, educator and longtime pivotal figure in the downtown New York art and music scenes. Forming a ‘portrait’ of sorts, the exhibition seeks to illuminate hitherto under-acknowledged aspects of the multifaceted artist’s life and work, underscoring what The New York Times described as a “rarefied position in the space where philosophical inquiry meets the cool-kid avant-garde.” Through her assignments for students, reading lists, diary entries, artist statements, and much more besides, we encounter Ess as continually probing the boundaries of the seen and unseen, what she called the “in here” versus the “out there.”

Barbara Ess was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1944 (although her birth was often publicly dated to 1948.) She graduated with a degree in Philosophy and English Literature at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, followed by a brief stint at the London School of Film Technique. By the late ‘70s she had returned to New York, where, over the next 30 years, she formed a number of bands in and around the city’s No Wave scene including The Static, Disband, Daily Life, and Y Pants among others.

From 1978-87 Ess ran the iconic mixed-media publication Just Another Asshole, often edited in collaboration with her longtime creative collaborator and romantic partner Glenn Branca. Across zines, records, and books, Just Another Asshole gathered together essays, short stories, artworks and more by a truly idiosyncratic – and now iconic – coalition of downtown luminaries including Kathy Acker, Michael Gira, Kim Gordon, Dan Graham, Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, Cookie Mueller, Richard Prince, Lynne Tillman, Martha Wilson and David Wojnarowicz, among many others.

In 1983, Ess began making photographs with a pinhole camera, discovering the process by which she would go on to produce many of the most iconic images of her career. A page of handwritten notes on view in this exhibition, dated to November 12 of that year, notes the discovery: “Today I made my first pinhole photos. One of the most exciting things I can remember. The possibilities (…)”

Many of Ess’ earliest exhibitions as a visual artist coincided with her involvement with White Columns throughout the early ‘80s. In 1981 she, Virginia Piersol and Gail Vachon performed as Y Pants during White Columns’ legendary Noise Fest festival (organized by Thurston Moore); Ess also created the artwork for the subsequent Noise Fest cassette and with Kim Gordon co-curated and participated in Noise Fest’s accompanying exhibition The Big Beat, featuring art by artist-musicians.  That same year she was a part of a three-person show, Books, which displayed artists’ books made by Ess alongside those of Glenda Hydler and Meredith Lund. In 1982 she had an early two-person show with her close friend Susan Hiller at the gallery. Two works believed to have been included in that 1982 show are presently on display: Untitled (Water + Baby (Barbara’s) head) and Untitled (Dogs). Birth, and babies, would often figure in Ess’ work.

A denied grant application submitted by White Columns on Ess’ behalf revealed that the organization and artist sought funding for Ess’ early Census project, in which she photographed the interiors of 11 out of 16 identically designed apartments in her building on Spring Street, including her own, which she cohabitated with Branca. (Census was presented at Franklin Furnace in 1980.) Ess continued to live in the Spring Street apartment until her passing in 2021. (She created work from and about her apartment once again in 2018; following a bad bout of bronchitis that kept the artist homebound for several weeks, images from Ess’ eerily prescient Shut In series would form a component of the artist’s first solo exhibition with Magenta Plains.)

As a beloved professor in the Bard College Photography program for over two decades, Ess’s assignments were frequently inventive, sometimes so much so that they veered into becoming works of art in and of themselves. One such assignment directs students to “use” a photograph in 26 different ways, listed from A to Z. Some of the ways to “use” a photograph are: as a window, as a mirror, as a weapon, as a hiding place, as your mother, to remember yourself, to forget, as your sensorium. A sign hung on her office door, with a quote attributed to Ess but assumedly printed by a student: “There’s a lot of ways to cook this egg.”

Barbara Ess – Archives concludes with the collaborative artwork A Portrait of Barbara Ess, 2021-23, organized by artist and founder of F Magazine, Adam Marnie. Ess was, amongst many other things, a master self-portraitist, but here, across a group of 23 framed photographs by many of Ess’ closest friends, we, the viewer, get to encounter Ess as those who loved her did. A Portrait of Barbara Ess underscores just how important community was to both Barbara’s life and work.

Barbara Ess – Archives has been organized by White Columns in collaboration with the artist’s Estate and Boo-Hooray. The materials in the exhibition have been drawn from the artist’s own archives, with select additional material from Magenta Plains as well as White Columns’ own archives. We hope that the current exhibition will lead to a formal retrospective evaluation of one of the most persistently original artists of the past fifty years.

Barbara Ess – Archives is accompanied by a newly-commissioned essay on Ess’s work by Kirby Gookin, whose diligent work in cataloging Ess’s archives will prove invaluable to future generations of art historians and curators alike.

 


 

White Columns would like to express our sincere thanks to the Estate of Barbara Ess; Johan Kugelberg and the team at Boo-Hooray; everyone at Magenta Plains; and Kirby Gookin and Adam Marnie/F for their enthusiastic support of this exhibition.

The Barbara Ess Estate is represented by Magenta Plains, New York.

For further information about this exhibition contact: violet@whitecolumns.org

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 11am to 6pm.

Events

Discussion with friends of Barbara Ess
Tuesday, October 17th at 2pm EST

White Columns is pleased to announce an online gathering of friends of Barbara Ess, presented on the occasion of the exhibition Barbara Ess – Archives, currently on view at the gallery. Participants will each speak to their personal relationship with Ess and her work, and will include the artist’s friends, colleagues, collaborators, gallerists, and curators.

Speakers include:
Peggy Ahwesh
Christine Hahn
Adam Marnie
Leor Miller
Megan Plunkett
Peter Scott
Olivia Smith

Barbara Ess – Archives: Kirby Gookin Talk

Saturday, October 21st at 2pm EST

White Columns is pleased to present a talk by Kirby Gookin, Ess’ longtime friend and “unofficial archivist,” on the occasion of the exhibition Barbara Ess – Archives.

Publication & Merch

Screenprinted T-shirt, 2023
Celebrating Barbara Ess’ legendary publication series ‘Just Another Asshole’, 1978 – 1987.

PURCHASE HERE

All sizes just restocked!

Screenprinted Crewneck, 2023
Celebrating Barbara Ess’ legendary publication series ‘Just Another Asshole’, 1978 – 1987.

PURCHASE HERE

Published by F
Second printing
6.75 x 4 inches, saddle stitched
36 pages + cover, b/w Risograph
Edition: 200 (numbered)

PURCHASE HERE

 

A forward-facing view of a large black and white photographic print of a woman in a dress holding a baby in her lap. The baby’s arms are outstretched and it gazes upwards, seemingly in awe. There is a sentence on the wall to the right of the piece printed in beige that reads “HAVE YOU EVER EXPERIENCED ECSTASY?”
Frontal view through a brick archway within a gallery. To the left of the arch hangs two small pieces. One is a reflective portrait of a woman’s face with X’s over the eyes. The other is writing on a sheet of  8.5 by 11” white paper. Looking through the archway on the wall straight ahead is a photograph of Barbara Ess playing the bass. On the wall to the right is a large photographic print of a woman holding a baby.
Forward-facing view of a gallery. In the vitrines closest to the viewer are 23 pieces of ephemera related to Barbara Ess’ exhibitions. On the wall with the archway hangs 10 pieces of varying themed works. Towards the back are two rows of vitrines. One row stands against the wall and one extends through the gallery at an angle. On the wall behind both vitrines, 12 posters from various music performances hang on the wall, all varying in size, color and content. In front of the wall to the right are two vitrines holding a variety of material, behind it are 4 wall pieces.
An angled view of a gallery. The vitrine nearest to the viewer holds material related to Barbara Ess exhibitions. On the freestanding wall to the right are various writings, photographs and a poster of an eye surrounded by text that reads WAC IS WATCHING / WOMEN TAKE ACTION. In front of this wall are vitrines encased with varying material related to the wall pieces. There are multiple vitrines towards the back of the gallery. On the back wall behind the vitrines are 13 posters relating to musical performances.
An angled view of two gallery walls meeting at a corner. In the vitrine nearest the viewer are 11 copies of various issues of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall to the left hang 9 pieces, 7 of which are various writings by Barbara Ess. 2 are work prints. The adjacent wall holds 7 posters relating to musical performances. In front of the wall are several more vitrines.
An angled view of a gallery. Three vitrines stand at an angle in front of a white column, inside each one is material relating to the zine Just Another Asshole. Behind the white pillar are multiple vitrines standing against the back wall. Hanging on the back wall are 13 posters all varying in size, color and content. The wall to the right holds three smaller pieces.
A forward-facing view of a gallery. Nearest to the viewer is an angled vitrine holding a variety of material from issues 6 and 7 of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall straight ahead are 12 pieces hung with varied spacing. The two on the far left are self portraits of Barbara Ess; the rest are writings on yellow notebook paper and white printer paper.
An angled view of several walls in a gallery. Nearest to the viewer are 4 vitrines, each displaying exhibition ephemera. The free-standing wall in the middle holds a collection of 23 framed photographs hung in 4 rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Behind the freestanding wall is a line of the angled vitrines, and another row of vitrines against the back wall. On the wall farthest from the viewer hangs 13 colorful posters.
A frontal-facing view of the gallery. On the wall to the left are a pair of writings on yellow notebook paper and two larger mounted photographic works leaning on a small white shelf mounted to the wall. Straight ahead are 4 vitrines standing in front of several large windows. Hanging on the freestanding wall to the right are a collection of 23 smaller framed photographs hung in four rows.
A forward-facing view of a freestanding gallery wall. Hanging on the wall are a collection of 23 small framed photographs hung in four rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Most of the photographs are of Barbara Ess, while some images are drawn from her artwork.
A forward-facing view of a gallery wall. On the left of the wall are two pieces of handwritten notes on lined yellow paper. To the right of those pieces are two larger mounted photographs leaning against the wall on a mounted shelf. The first piece is a highly contrasted black and white image of several dogs. The second piece is a diptych of watery reflections next to a high-contrast image of a baby with its eyes half closed.
An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole, including copies of Just Another Asshole issues 1 through 3 and a poster for a Just Another Asshole Benefit at the Mudd Club.
An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole issues 6 and 7. These include copies of issues 6 and 7, an invitation to the release event for issue 6, a newspaper clipping by Vince Aletti, the original album cover from which the cover image for JAA #6 was drawn, and more.
An overhead view of a vitrine containing material from various exhibitions at White Columns in the early ‘80s in which Barbara Ess participated. These materials include exhibition posters, postcard invitations, and letters from the artist Susan Hiller to Ess, etc.
An overhead view of a vitrine. On the left half of the vitrine are materials relating to an organization of photographs by Ted Serios, organized by Barbara Ess and others, including an annotated exhibition brochure. On the right are materials relating to Ess’ questionnaire Artists and $, such as two pieces of paper that read ARTISTS AND $ and a copy of a questionnaire “about the relation of money to the lives, priorities and attitudes of creative artists.”
A vignetted photograph of a woman using tarot cards while seated at a wooden table. Next to her is a glass of wine and a cigarette in an ashtray. Towards the bottom edge of the photograph, the tarot cards become distorted and appear to stretch out towards the viewer.

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (A forward-facing view of a large black and white photographic print of a woman in a dress holding a baby in her lap. The baby’s arms are outstretched and it gazes upwards, seemingly in awe. There is a sentence on the wall to the right of the piece printed in beige that reads “HAVE YOU EVER EXPERIENCED ECSTASY?”)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (Frontal view through a brick archway within a gallery. To the left of the arch hangs two small pieces. One is a reflective portrait of a woman’s face with X’s over the eyes. The other is writing on a sheet of  8.5 by 11” white paper. Looking through the archway on the wall straight ahead is a photograph of Barbara Ess playing the bass. On the wall to the right is a large photographic print of a woman holding a baby.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (Forward-facing view of a gallery. In the vitrines closest to the viewer are 23 pieces of ephemera related to Barbara Ess’ exhibitions. On the wall with the archway hangs 10 pieces of varying themed works. Towards the back are two rows of vitrines. One row stands against the wall and one extends through the gallery at an angle. On the wall behind both vitrines, 12 posters from various music performances hang on the wall, all varying in size, color and content. In front of the wall to the right are two vitrines holding a variety of material, behind it are 4 wall pieces.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An angled view of a gallery. The vitrine nearest to the viewer holds material related to Barbara Ess exhibitions. On the freestanding wall to the right are various writings, photographs and a poster of an eye surrounded by text that reads WAC IS WATCHING / WOMEN TAKE ACTION. In front of this wall are vitrines encased with varying material related to the wall pieces. There are multiple vitrines towards the back of the gallery. On the back wall behind the vitrines are 13 posters relating to musical performances.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An angled view of two gallery walls meeting at a corner. In the vitrine nearest the viewer are 11 copies of various issues of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall to the left hang 9 pieces, 7 of which are various writings by Barbara Ess. 2 are work prints. The adjacent wall holds 7 posters relating to musical performances. In front of the wall are several more vitrines.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An angled view of a gallery. Three vitrines stand at an angle in front of a white column, inside each one is material relating to the zine Just Another Asshole. Behind the white pillar are multiple vitrines standing against the back wall. Hanging on the back wall are 13 posters all varying in size, color and content. The wall to the right holds three smaller pieces.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (A forward-facing view of a gallery. Nearest to the viewer is an angled vitrine holding a variety of material from issues 6 and 7 of the zine Just Another Asshole. On the wall straight ahead are 12 pieces hung with varied spacing. The two on the far left are self portraits of Barbara Ess; the rest are writings on yellow notebook paper and white printer paper.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An angled view of several walls in a gallery. Nearest to the viewer are 4 vitrines, each displaying exhibition ephemera. The free-standing wall in the middle holds a collection of 23 framed photographs hung in 4 rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Behind the freestanding wall is a line of the angled vitrines, and another row of vitrines against the back wall. On the wall farthest from the viewer hangs 13 colorful posters.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (A frontal-facing view of the gallery. On the wall to the left are a pair of writings on yellow notebook paper and two larger mounted photographic works leaning on a small white shelf mounted to the wall. Straight ahead are 4 vitrines standing in front of several large windows. Hanging on the freestanding wall to the right are a collection of 23 smaller framed photographs hung in four rows.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (A forward-facing view of a freestanding gallery wall. Hanging on the wall are a collection of 23 small framed photographs hung in four rows, all varying in size, shape and color. Most of the photographs are of Barbara Ess, while some images are drawn from her artwork.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (A forward-facing view of a gallery wall. On the left of the wall are two pieces of handwritten notes on lined yellow paper. To the right of those pieces are two larger mounted photographs leaning against the wall on a mounted shelf. The first piece is a highly contrasted black and white image of several dogs. The second piece is a diptych of watery reflections next to a high-contrast image of a baby with its eyes half closed.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole, including copies of Just Another Asshole issues 1 through 3 and a poster for a Just Another Asshole Benefit at the Mudd Club.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An overhead view of a vitrine with light blue felt backing. Inside the vitrine are materials relating to the zine Just Another Asshole issues 6 and 7. These include copies of issues 6 and 7, an invitation to the release event for issue 6, a newspaper clipping by Vince Aletti, the original album cover from which the cover image for JAA #6 was drawn, and more.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An overhead view of a vitrine containing material from various exhibitions at White Columns in the early ‘80s in which Barbara Ess participated. These materials include exhibition posters, postcard invitations, and letters from the artist Susan Hiller to Ess, etc.)

Barbara Ess – Archives, installation view, 2023. (An overhead view of a vitrine. On the left half of the vitrine are materials relating to an organization of photographs by Ted Serios, organized by Barbara Ess and others, including an annotated exhibition brochure. On the right are materials relating to Ess’ questionnaire Artists and $, such as two pieces of paper that read ARTISTS AND $ and a copy of a questionnaire “about the relation of money to the lives, priorities and attitudes of creative artists.”)

Barbara Ess, Portrait of Cookie Mueller, n.d, photograph, 8 × 10 in. (A vignetted photograph of a woman using tarot cards while seated at a wooden table. Next to her is a glass of wine and a cigarette in an ashtray. Towards the bottom edge of the photograph, the tarot cards become distorted and appear to stretch out towards the viewer.)