MoMA PS1 opens major exhibition of artist Vaginal Davis
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, October 10, 2025


MoMA PS1 opens major exhibition of artist Vaginal Davis
Vaginal Davis. The Wicked Pavilion. 2021. Installation view of Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product, on view at Moderna Museet from May 15 through October 13, 2024. Courtesy Moderna Museet. Photo: My Matson.



LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- This fall, MoMA PS1 presents a major exhibition of Vaginal Davis, spanning five decades of her practice as a performer, visual artist, author, filmmaker, musician, educator, self-proclaimed “Blacktress,” and countercultural icon. Originating at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Vaginal Davis: Magnificent Product makes its US debut at PS1. Organized thematically, the exhibition includes major installations, video, paintings, zines, audio works, sculptures, and cross-disciplinary collaborations, as well as extensive archival materials. The presentation spotlights Ms. Davis’s role as an underground trailblazer in the overlapping realms of art, music, performance, and queer politics—as well as her uncompromising glamour.

An archival display focused on her early career in her hometown, Los Angeles, traces the tributaries of her early career in the 1980s and ‘90s. A founding mother of the city’s queercore scene, Ms. Davis was, in her own words, “too gay for the punk scene and too punk for the gays.” Early videos, photographs, and ephemera detail her critical position at this nexus of the punk and queer worlds, highlighting her bands— ¡Cholita! The Female Menudo; black fag; Pedro, Muriel, & Esther (PME); and the Afro Sisters, whose 1984 unreleased album gives the exhibition its title—as well as performances, photoshoots, and club nights. In a dedicated cinema room, films such as That Fertile Feeling (1983) and The White to Be Angry (1999) demonstrate Ms. Davis’s embodied pastiche of social mores and horrors, exposing cracks in the myth of a singular identity.

Ms. Davis’s time in Los Angeles reappears in the installation HAG – small, contemporary, haggard (2012), a tribute to the eponymous gallery she ran out of her Sunset Boulevard apartment from 1982 to 1989. During its run, HAG Gallery featured the work of creatives such as actor John Drew Barrymore (who lived next door), designer Rick Owens, and vocalist Alice Bag, among many others. First realized in 2012 at PARTICIPANT INC. in New York, HAG recreates the footprint of the original Los Angeles gallery in the form of an Ames room, whose torqued architecture distorts the scale of viewers who enter it— rendering the small large and vice versa. Papered with a “lesbian domesticity” wallpaper, it houses sculptures made of bread baked in the likenesses of Mariah Carey and Justin Timberlake, as well as a series of portraits painted using discount makeup. Elsewhere, the exhibition brings together a broader selection of Ms. Davis’s paintings from the early 1990s through 2022, which, evocative of religious icon paintings, and painted with discontinued cosmetics, celebrate grande dames from courtesan Madame du Barry to actress Lillian Gish—”women trapped in the bodies of women,” as Ms. Davis notes. This selection also features three of Ms. Davis’s largest paintings to date, all from the collection of The Museum of Modern Art, exalting deities such as Oshun, African Goddess of Love and Sweet Water (2021).

The installation HOFPFISTEREI offers visitors the chance to explore a vast collection of Ms. Davis’s writing, including her iconoclastic zines filled with poetry, pornography, and LA gossip; the columns she penned for the LA Weekly; her ongoing blog “Speaking From the Diaphragm”; and works of self-published fiction. The installation highlights further channels through which Ms. Davis’s distinct voice circulated, such as audio works, “video zines,” and footage of live readings. As an active archive with a working photocopy machine, HOFPFISTEREI allows visitors to copy, compile, and collage their own editorial projects to take home with them.

The work The Wicked Pavilion (2021) comprises two installations: The Fantasia Library and The Tween Bedroom, which allow visitors to delve further into lineages of artistic influence and the political potency of

desire. The “tween bedroom” is replete with a vanity, magazine clippings of crushes, movie posters, and an oversized papier-mâché phallus on a rotating bed. The Fantasia Library holds five hundred pink books that Ms. Davis has started writing but “never quite finished,” or aspires to write, with titles like “Semi Detached Bungalow” and “The Fiscal Clit.” It also features a selection of titles influential to Ms. Davis, from Kathy Acker’s novel Empire of the Senseless (1988) to Liz Renay’s self-help classic How to Attract Men (1966).

Central to Magnificent Product are Ms. Davis’s enduring collaborations with influential artists and collectives in the United States and abroad. Naked on my Ozgoad — Anal Deep Throat (2024–25) is a new multimedia installation made in collaboration with New York-based artist Jonathan Berger that materializes Ms. Davis’s life-long love for L. Frank Baum’s Oz books through sculpture, sound, and prints made directly on the museum’s walls. The installation recalls her first art exhibition—an earlier reimaging of Baum’s children’s novels—at the Pio Pico Library in Los Angeles at age eight.

In 2005, Ms. Davis relocated from Los Angeles to Berlin. Shortly prior to her move, she had begun collaborating with the Berlin-based artist collective CHEAP. Founded by Susanne Sachsse, Marc Siegel, and Daniel Hendrickson in 2001, the group creates performances, videos, installations, and other discursive forms that combine theory and pleasure, politics and whimsy, aesthetics and sex. The sound, object, and moving image installation Choose Mutation, with Photographs by Annette Frick (2024), presented in PS1’s double-height gallery, features a dystopian video about paranoia and the resonance of political control over the body, projected onto a motorized billboard. The work, conceived by Susanne Sachsse, Marc Siegel, and Martin Siemann, also includes a series of black-and-white photographs by Annette Frick depicting the CHEAP collective members in early performances.










Today's News

October 10, 2025

Charlotte Jackson Fine Art opens an exhibition of works by Helen Pashgian

Coin-op and antique advertising collectors chart a course for Las Vegas and Morphy's Oct. 16-18 auction

Journey through time: Artemis Fine Arts unveils 'Worldly Treasures' auction

LA's longest-running independent art fair "LA Art Show" kicks off art season on January 7

A King reborn: Velázquez's Philip IV gallops back to glory at the Prado

Gagosian London exhibits Brice Marden's Etched Letters, showcasing unseen prints and drawings

Marina Abramović retrospective at Albertina Modern spans five decades

Sophie von Hellermann paints luminous 62-meter frieze for Kunsthalle Wien

National Portrait Gallery stages first major exhibition dedicated to the fashion photography of Cecil Beaton

Warhol Museum exhibition explores icon's obsession with mortality in Andy Warhol: Vanitas

Art Basel appoints Carly Murphy as Global Head of Collector and Institutional Relations

The Brooklyn Museum presents Everyday Rebellions: Collection Conversations

Olomouc Museum of Art presents 15th- and 16th-century Dutch masters

U.S. debut of Viktor&Rolf fashion exhibition opens at High Museum

Sung Tieu's Bleed at Kunsthalle Bern interrogates Switzerland's colonial ties to rubber and exploitation

Art Basel Qatar announces 87 galleries for inaugural edition in February 2026

Center for Creative Photography announces completion of cold-storage facility

MoMA PS1 opens major exhibition of artist Vaginal Davis

Banksy's 'Simpsons,' Pamela Adlon's 'King of the Hill' lead Heritage's Art of Anime & Everything Cool Auction

Frank Zappa's 'Baby Snakes' SG headlines Heritage's Dec. 5 Vintage Guitars & Musical Instruments Auction

Lincoln items including gift Gettysburg cane preside over Heritage's Americana & Political Signature Auction

Teresa Margolles explores identity and presence in grid of human imprints

The Whitney Museum presents Grace Rosario Perkins's first solo Museum show in New York

Essi Kuokkanen paints the ineffable




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


Truck Accident Attorneys

sports betting sites not on GamStop



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful