About The Work
“My work comes out of incredible love and dialogue with people who share my queer identity with me and what it meant at that time in our lives.” — Catherine Opie
In celebration of Pride Month, we are thrilled to release a new limited-edition print by beloved Los Angeles-based photographer Catherine Opie, who has spent the last three decades examining the construction of identity in America through her own queer lens.
A portion of the sales for this edition will be donated to Callen-Lorde, a New York-based organization dedicated to LGBTQ+ healthcare.
For this work, printed in a limited-edition of 25, Opie delved into her personal archive to revisit her formative years in California. Shot on a 35mm camera during a Gay Pride parade in San Francisco in 1990, this photograph symbolizes a time of liberation in the artist’s life. For Opie, the work captures the freedom that she finally felt in her 20s after coming out and embracing her sexual identity.
The image also serves as a powerful reminder to contemporary society of the incredible strides that the LGBTQ+ community has made to protect their rights since the 1980s, especially at a time when these civil liberties are once again being questioned and challenged by policymakers in America.
Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin
About Catherine Opie
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Magnus Resch picks the Artspace editions that would look great on any wall
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz launches new Phaidon & Artspace edition, Line Painter, 2023
- Interviews & Features: Artspace Editions are on show at Christie's this month
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz's Really Great Year
- Interviews & Features: Cecily Brown's Really Great Year
Pigment print on Canson Platine paper
20.00 x 24.00 in
50.8 x 61.0 cm
This work is signed by the artist on verso.
About The Work
“My work comes out of incredible love and dialogue with people who share my queer identity with me and what it meant at that time in our lives.” — Catherine Opie
In celebration of Pride Month, we are thrilled to release a new limited-edition print by beloved Los Angeles-based photographer Catherine Opie, who has spent the last three decades examining the construction of identity in America through her own queer lens.
A portion of the sales for this edition will be donated to Callen-Lorde, a New York-based organization dedicated to LGBTQ+ healthcare.
For this work, printed in a limited-edition of 25, Opie delved into her personal archive to revisit her formative years in California. Shot on a 35mm camera during a Gay Pride parade in San Francisco in 1990, this photograph symbolizes a time of liberation in the artist’s life. For Opie, the work captures the freedom that she finally felt in her 20s after coming out and embracing her sexual identity.
The image also serves as a powerful reminder to contemporary society of the incredible strides that the LGBTQ+ community has made to protect their rights since the 1980s, especially at a time when these civil liberties are once again being questioned and challenged by policymakers in America.
Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin
About Catherine Opie
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Magnus Resch picks the Artspace editions that would look great on any wall
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz launches new Phaidon & Artspace edition, Line Painter, 2023
- Interviews & Features: Artspace Editions are on show at Christie's this month
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz's Really Great Year
- Interviews & Features: Cecily Brown's Really Great Year
- Ships in 6 to 8 weeks from New York. Framed works ship in 7 to 9 weeks from New York.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
- Questions about this work?
- Interested in other works by this artist or other artists? We will source them for you.
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