Goldin, Nan, Self-Portrait on the Train #2, 1992. |
Born in Washington D.C. area, Nan Goldin was brought up in a liberal and progressive middle class home. Her father worked in broadcasting and Goldin was the youngest of four children, although she was the closest with her older sister, Barbara Holly. At the age of eleven, Goldin's eighteen year old sister committed suicide, which was an act that had an big effect on Goldin's photographic eye, particularly later on in Goldin's career. Shortly after, Goldin and her family moved to Boston, where she met David Armstrong at the age of fourteen. Armstrong and Goldin became friends and studied photography together.
In 1968, at the age of fifteen, Goldin enrolled at the Satya Community School, where she first started to study photography. In 1973, Goldin had her first solo show in Boston, where she showed black and white silver gelatin prints of the city's gay and transsexual communities:
Goldin, Nan. (Left) Lola Modelling, Boston, (Middle) Crystal with a Friend, Boston, (Right) Naomi, 1972 - 73. |
Goldin continued her education School of the Museum of Fine Arts/Tuffs University in Boston, where she earned her BFA in 1977 and her Fifth Year Certificate in 1978. After graduation, Goldin moved to New York City and began photographing several "underground" groups such as the Post-Punk New-Wave Music Scene, the Post-Stonewall Gay and the Hard-Drug Subcultures of the late 1970s to mid-1980s. During these years, Goldin also traveled to London, Berlin and Provincetown, Massachusetts to document her "extended family".
Goldin, Nan, French Chris on the Convertible, NYC, 1979. |
Goldin, Nan, Trixie on the Cot, NYC, 1979. |
Goldin, Nan, The Hug, New York City, 1980. |
Goldin, Nan, Greer and Robert on the Bed, New York City, 1982. |
Goldin, Nan, Brian and Nan in Bed, New York City, 1983. |
The photograph above was featured on the cover of The Ballad of Sexual Dependency and portrays an intimate couple, Goldin herself and her then boyfriend, Brian. However, the content behind the image is revealed by their gestures; they are both on opposite ends of the bed. The light within the image further separates them and Goldin's expression almost portrays a sense of fear yet wanting to be closer to her boyfriend. This photograph was taken with a cable release and the content within the image certainly portrays what was to come after in terms of her relationship with Brian.
Goldin, Nan, Nan One Month After Being Battered, New York City, 1984. |
01. Costa, Guido, and Nan Goldin. Nan Goldin. London: Phaidon, 2001. Print.
02. "Nan Goldin." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation, 12 May 2013. Web. 06 Dec. 2013.
03. Garratt, Sheryl. "The Dark Room." The Observer. Guardian News and Media, 06 Jan. 2002. Web. 06 Dec. 2013.
04. Wolf, Kate. "The Ballad Continues: On Nan Goldin." Los Angelos Review of Books. N.p., 23 Dec. 2012. Web. 06 Dec. 2013.