NEW YORK, NY.- It is with great sadness that
CLAMP announces the death of Amos Badertscher at the age of 86.
Born in 1936, Badertscher was a lifelong resident of Baltimore and was known for his poignant portraits of people he met on the streets and in the nightclubs of his beloved city.
Developing and printing his work at home, Badertscher took extensive oral histories from his photographic subjects, and using his literary skills wrote their histories on the margins of the gelatin silver prints he created.
Queer art historian and curator Jonathan David Katz said: With the death of Amos Badertscher, America has lost one of its greatest photographers. Walking into Amoss Baltimore home was as close as I can imagine to seeing King Tuts tomb for the first time. There were thousands of amazing photographs, each unforgettable and unprecedented. The first thing you saw was their formal sophistication and otherworldly beauty but then the emotional arc hit you like a ton of bricks. This was a history I never knew but can now never shake.
Artforum wrote of Badertschers first major exhibition at the Duke University Museum of Art in 1995: Its the tonal coldness of these images, coupled with their outward eroticism, that distinguishes his practice from much of contemporary queer portrait photography, which has tended to be more invested in defiant heroism or lyrical sensuousness.
CLAMP will open a previously planned solo show of Badertschers work in September 2023. Beginning in late August 2023, a major retrospective at the Albin O. Kuhn Library and Gallery at the University of Maryland, Baltimore Campus curated by Beth Sanders will also be on display.
A printed collection of Badertschers stories and images is due out in 2024, edited by Hunter OHanian. The LGBTQ history in Baltimore that Amos preserved is not a history of LGBTQ milestones, gay pride marches, or US Supreme Court decisions, said OHanian, the former head of the College Art Association and the Leslie-Lohman Museum. It is what happened while those events transpired around us.