Gallery 98

ART EPHEMERA 1960s – 1990s

Gallery 98 is for collectors and researchers. We specialize in announcement cards, posters, publications and other art ephemera from the 1960s - 1990s. For all inquiries: 98bowery@gmail.com | Sign up for our Newsletter    

No Wave and Independent Film

An Exhibition of Photographs and Ephemera

By Marc H. Miller

Debbie Harry & Eric Mitchell meet in an alley in Amos Poe’s The Foreigner, 1977.

The No Wave and Independent films produced in downtown New York in the 1970s and 1980s are an intriguing hybrid art form that intermingles music, fashion, performance and visual art. Made with miniscule budgets and a determined do-it-yourself aesthetic, these films are rarely screened today. Some snippets can be viewed on YouTube, but for the most part the films live on primarily through the posters and photographs that were originally created to publicize the films.  This is not an entirely unfortunate development. Because the press photos were intended as advertisement, they effectively capture the essence of the films; and, in most cases, the filmmakers were themselves involved in the making and selection of the still images.  These stills stand on their own, not only as vivid reflections of the films but also of the broader 1970s zeitgeist that the films consciously sought to embody.

Amos Poe was the first of the downtown independent filmmakers to attract attention. In The Foreigner (1977), Poe led the way with noire narratives and in connecting the new independent films to downtown bohemia by prominently casting musicians, artists and other nightlife celebrities.  No Wave music, a post-punk genre popular in visual art circles, was of particular importance for filmmakers Beth B and Scott B, Gordon Stevenson, and Richard Kern. Many No Wave musicians starred in their films, and the films and music share stylistic similarities such as themes of violence and death, and a commitment to experimentation.  The phrase “No Wave Films” was soon popularized.  Within the downtown film orbit, Charlie Ahearn’s Wild Style (1983) occupies a special place. The film features many familiar downtown faces but its focus is the hip-hop movement just beginning to emerge in the South Bronx.

Exhibition Highlight: Photographs by Fernando Natalici taken on the set of Amos Poe’s films, Unmade Beds (1976) and The Foreigner (1977); a full publicity kit for Beth B and Scott B ‘s The Offenders (1979) that includes a booklet, a compilation of press clippings, and four publicity stills; three beautifully printed photos for Ecstatic Stigmatic (1980) by the little known Gordon Stevenson, an early loss to AIDS; Charlie Ahearn stills for The Deadly Art of Survival (1979) and an early set of publicity prints for Wild Style (1983); and a poster for the New Cinema (1979), a copy of X Motion Picture Magazine (1978), and materials from MWF Video Club are each evidence of the involvement of the artist group Colab with the Independent film scene.  All the photographic prints and ephemera are vintage and date from the years when the films were first made and marketed.  Natalici’s photographs are signed, and many other photographs have markings on their reverse often by the filmmakers themselves.

 

Exhibition Items

(Please click individual items for price and full description)

New Cinema, James Nares, Rome ’78, Flyer, 1979

Amos Poe, "Unmade Beds" - Photograph of Duncan Hannah and Amos Poe, 1976

Amos Poe, Unmade Beds, Production Still of Duncan Hannah and Amos Poe, 1976

Sold
Amos Poe's Autograph #2 - Magazine, 1977

Amos Poe, Autograph Magazine #2, 1977

Sold
Amos Poe, "The Foreigner" - poster 1978

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, 2 Posters/Flyers, 1978

Sold
Photograph of Debbie Harry from The Foreigner

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, Photograph of Debbie Harry, 1977

Sold
collection of photos of debbie harry on set

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, Debbie Harry & Eric Mitchell, 3 Film Stills from the Cigarette Scene, 1977

Sold
Set of three photographs from Amos Poe's The Foreigner

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, Eric Mitchell in the Bondage Scene, 3 Film Stills, 1977

Sold
Amos Poe, "The Foreigner" - Photograph of Anya Phillips, 1977

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, Photograph of Anya Phillips, 1977

Amos Poe, "The Foreigner" - Photograph of Eric Mitchell, 1977

Amos Poe, The Foreigner, Photograph of Eric Mitchell, 1977

Max Karl photograph no wave

Beth B and Scott B, Max Karl, Photograph, 1978

photo from Scott B and Beth B's Max Karl

Beth B and Scott B, Max Karl, Photograph, 1978

front cover of the offenders booklet

Beth B & Scott B, The Offenders, Promotional Booklet, 1979

Offenders photograph

Beth B & Scott B, The Offenders, Photograph, 1979

photograph of offenders

Beth B & Scott B, The Offenders, Photograph, 1979

Charlie Ahearn, “Deadly Art of Survival,” Silkscreen Poster, 1979

Charlie Ahearn, The Deadly Art of Survival, Silkscreen Poster, 1979

Deadly Art photograph of man with bloody head

Charlie Ahearn, The Deadly Act of Survival, Photograph, 1979

Deadly Art photograph by Charlie Ahearn

Charlie Ahearn, The Deadly Act of Survival, Photograph, 1979

Wild Style Lee Pink photograph

Charlie Ahearn, Wild Style, 4 Photographs, 1982

Sold
postcard for Ecstatic Stigmatic

Gorden Stevenson, Ecstatic Stigmatic, Postcard

Manhattan Suicide still

Richard Kern, Manhattan Love Suicides, Photograph of David Wojnarowicz, 1985

Sold
X magazine, Volume 2, Issues 2 & 3.

COLAB, X Motion Picture Magazine, February 1978

New Cinema poster

New Cinema, February Schedule, Poster, 1979

Long Island Four poster no wave film

Anders Grafstrom, Long Island Four, Poster and Catalogue, Monday Wednesday Friday Video Club, 1986