"Guest of Cindy Sherman" A New Film Chronicles Life with the Reclusive Artist

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Written by rubin   
Friday, 20 March 2009 07:23

Cindy Sherman - Untitled Film Still - Cindy showing how identities are a form of social performance. Courtesy of Metro Images

NEW YORK, NY - In 1979, Cindy Sherman rocked the NYC art world at age 26 with her “Film Stills.” The haunting photographic series appears to chronicle actresses in the midst of dramatic and evocative film scenes, but is in fact the artist herself posing as the different subjects. Hailed for her play on media and identity, the shy and reclusive Sherman almost always uses herself as the model in her photographs and always in disguise. Today, at age 54, she is internationally acknowledged as one of the world’s most gifted and significant visual talents - in May 1999, ARTnews named Sherman, alongside Matisse and Picasso, as one of “The 20th Century’s Most Influential Artists.”

Although Sherman’s work is collected by every major art museum in the world, she has proven elusive as a media personality. She is not a self-promoter and leads a quiet private life. Sherman rarely does interviews and never explains the meaning of her work. Fans, desperate for a glimpse of this art world celebrity at her 2003 opening in England’s Serpentine Gallery, could not recognize who they were looking for.

Enter her complete opposite - Paul H-O, a former artist-turned-opinionated host/creator of the public-access series, GalleryBeat. In the nineties, Paul’s weekly show developed a cult following, chronicling often-inexplicable happenings in the contemporary art world. Produced on a shoestring budget with help from Art in America magazine editors Walter Robinson and Cathy Lebowitz, the program was a labor of love, driven by a strong affinity for art and its creators. Subjects ranged from the Russian conceptual artist Oleg Kulik (who, performing as a dog, bit an art critic); to profiles of artist-luminaries like Sean Landers and Cecily Brown. By the late nineties, Paul had become a recognizable fixture in the art scene, picking up fans and detractors: artist Julian Schnabel, entangled in an on-camera argument with Paul, called the program “idiotic.”

Cindy Sherman - Eva & Adele at the Gramercy Art Fair, 1994. Production still from Guest of Cindy Sherman. Image courtesy of Trela Media.In 1999, Paul learned that Cindy Sherman counted herself among his fans. At once, he set out to capture the ultimate prize in art world journalism -- to tape a series of interviews with the elusive artist. Cornering her at an art gallery opening, Paul asked for her participation. Surprising many (including Paul), Sherman agreed. As he started the series of interviews, fun banter turned into harmless flirting, and harmless flirting turned into something more - Paul and Cindy were falling in love. Soon after they started dating, Paul faced a series of personal crises, including illness and bankruptcy. Cindy stood by him, providing her love and support. In 2001, Paul moved into her SoHo loft, becoming further enmeshed in her world.

Guest of Cindy Sherman

The documentary combines rare, intimate verité of Sherman with anecdotes by friends and associates (filmmaker John Waters, writer/performer Eric Bogosian, artist Eric Fischl, Interview Magazine editor Ingrid Sischy, actors Danny De Vito, Carol Kane, Jeanne Tripplehorn and Molly Ringwald, producer Christine Vachon, New York Times art critic Roberta Smith, collector Eli Broad, fashion designer Mucchia Prada, among others) and dozens of hours of GalleryBeat footage. Also interviewed are Cindy’s relatives and college friends, and the documentary includes Super-8 home movies shot by Sherman’s father. Paul and his video camera went with Cindy to every opening she’s had in the last five years, on their vacations, to summers at the beach, recording the glamour of being a celebrity artist and the more mundane aspects of her everyday life.


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