Born to a
conservative Catholic family in Queens, New York, Robert Mapplethorpe
was no stranger to controversy. Using the pull of his wealthy paramour,
art curator Samuel Wagstaff, he established himself as a leading
photographer between 1977 and his death in 1989. Focusing principally on
sadomasochistic themes, his “The Perfect Moment” exhibition at the
Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, was pulled by director
Christina Orr-Cahill in June of 1989 when she feared the photographs’
gratuitous nudity would cause the museum to lose its funding from the
National Endowment for the Arts. Additionally, his eroticization of
black men has sparked debates among scholars like Essex Hemphill over
the racist undertones of his imagery. This December 1983 issue of Blueboy
(which has been broken into two parts) features several of
the images which have sparked this discussion. In this second half (see the first half here), a comedic
dictionary of gay vocabulary is accompanied by an illustration by Jerry Mills and photos
of models John and Joseph.
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