Jack Walls' Life of Magic
Everyone knows, or should know, about Walls relationship with famed photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. His lover, friend and somewhat of an artistic mentor, Mapplethorpe meant the world to Walls. Their lives were interwoven. As was he to other artists like Basquiat who painted him. He had seen Basquiat weeks before he died and after that, Mapplethorpe died too. Everyone was dying. Walls is a witness, enough so that a new crop of artists coming up in the 90s, Dash Snow, Dan Colen and Ryan McGinley among them, looked at him as some kind of legend. McGinley stood in the corner recording Walls as he spoke. Walls read from a short story that delved into Mapplethorpe's desire "to be cool," as well as his fascinations with art, sexy and money. “He liked having me as his boyfriend, and I was in love with him,” Walls said to us in the audience, blatantly, as if having recited this short story enough times that it was like saying hello to that person you see on your morning train ride every day.
The drawings worked similarly. On one of the many creations that lined the walls, Walls scribbled mantras how they were interwoven: “Through Mapplethorpe, I learned not only about photography but also about drawing and painting.”
Walls also spoke of AIDS, heroin, the liveliness that defined the era and the people he knew, and the inevitable reality of endings that's kept these death-bound circumstances in the past. Reminiscing on his relationships with Ryan McGinley and his friends, he drew comparisons between Snow and Basquiat, two artists who both seemed to be fighting "the same demons" — and both members of the infamous “27 Club.” Walls carried off on tangents every so often as he remembered specific moments while he read, making it clear that he was a purveyor of the magic — of that time, of those people, of that art — that he so candidly recalled.
Check out photos from the opening below.