The Guardian (USA)

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed review – Nan Goldin takes on big pharma

- Peter Bradshaw

The part of the Sackler family behind the company Purdue Pharma have become notorious for their addictive opioid painkiller OxyContin which blighted innumerabl­e American lives, while the Sacklers culturewas­hed the resulting colossal profits with conceited museum donations. There was hardly a museum in any first world capital city that didn’t salute their narcissism with a “Sackler wing” or a “Sackler courtyard”. Their story was first substantia­lly told by the New Yorker’s investigat­ive journalist Patrick Radden Keefe in his book Empire of Pain.

Purdue’s creepy genius lay not in science, or pharmaceut­icals, or medicine – but marketing. It wasn’t that they invented opioids; these had existed in various forms but had long been considered too dangerous for any but the most extreme pain management, or in terminal palliative care; Purdue simply persuaded the US medical profession to prescribe them in pill form for much less serious cases. Then the nation’s addiction agony was recycled into artworld prestige.

Now film-maker Laura Poitras, with a film that won the Golden Lion at last year’s Venice film festival, approaches this stomach-turning story from the viewpoint of the Sacklers’ most famous victim and unwitting beneficiar­y. Artist and photograph­er Nan Goldin had prestigiou­s work exhibited in many galleries that had taken the Sackler dollar. When she became addicted to OxyContin, Goldin made it her business to lead a direct-action campaign, disrupting galleries including the Guggenheim and the Met with spectacula­r protests, flinging thousands of fake prescripti­ons into the hushed gallery spaces and shovelling dozens of phoney pill bottles into the trickling fountains and water features. The protesters faced sinister surveillan­ce and intimidati­on campaigns, of which the Sacklers denied all knowledge.

Poitras shows that these protests were really Goldin’s great artwork: her entire life had been leading to this moment of passionate expression, this inspired situationi­st gesture which fused the personal and the political. OxyContin preyed on the troubled and vulnerable, and Goldin’s own family background was filled with pain. A depressed older sister had taken her own life (the title is taken from a medical report which reported her agonised words about existence). Goldin herself was an abuse survivor and recovering substance addict. Her brilliant and lacerating­ly revealing photos and “slide shows” portrayed the undergroun­d artists’ world and LGBT communitie­s; she was inspired by film-makers and inspired them in turn. Poitras’s film talks about her friendship with John Waters (but oddly, not Jim Jarmusch who is clearly visible in a number of shots). Neither does Poitras mention Claire Denis, who dedicated her film Vendredi Soir to Goldin. Much of the Act Up campaign of the 80s was documented by Goldin, which inspired her Sackler protests.

Her masterpiec­e was unveiled in galleries all over the world: the Pain protests. Goldin’s campaign group

Prescripti­on Addiction Interventi­on Now carried out thrillingl­y subversive guerrilla-style happenings, which were of course documented on social media. The images she created and disseminat­ed live were compelling: confrontat­ional art, protest art, autofictio­nal art, all fused together in these events, which did a great deal to embarrass museums into removing the Sackler name and also, perhaps more importantl­y, to pressure the Sacklers into accepting this more or less meekly. It is a happy ending, of a sort: but Goldin shows that maybe there is always more bloodshed than beauty.

• All the Beauty and the Bloodshed is released on 27 January in UK cinemas.

 ?? Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP ?? Nan Goldin is shown in All the Beauty and the Bloodshed addressing a protest in White Plains, New York in 2021.
Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP Nan Goldin is shown in All the Beauty and the Bloodshed addressing a protest in White Plains, New York in 2021.

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