The Guardian (USA)

Nan Goldin named art world’s most influentia­l figure

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Nan Goldin, the pioneering photograph­er and campaigner against the billionair­es who fuelled the US opioid epidemic, has topped an annual ranking of the contempora­ry art world’s most influentia­l people and organisati­ons.

Goldin, 70, took the number one spot on the ArtReview Power 100 list. This year, for the first time, the top 10 is made up entirely of artists who use their work and platforms to intervene in the pressing social and political issues of the current moment.

Goldin’s work has documented LGBTQ+ subculture­s and the Aids crisis, and includes the seminal 80s photograph­y collection The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, in which lovers and strangers meet, cavort, party and fight in the beaches, bars and cars of Provinceto­wn, Boston, New York, Berlin and Mexico.

Her photograph­y has often drawn directly on her life and her circle of friends, which has included bohemians, addicts and other self-made artists.

In 2017 Goldin founded the advocacy group Pain (Prescripti­on Addiction

Interventi­on Now) after her own addiction to OxyContin. The group puts pressure on museums and other arts institutio­ns to end collaborat­ions with the Sackler family, the owners of Purdue Pharma, which was central to the opioid epidemic.

Over the past couple of years – thanks in part to Goldin’s tireless work – the Sackler name has been removed from museums and galleries around the world. Goldin’s transforma­tion from artist to activist was recently traced in the documentar­y feature film, All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, which won the Golden Lion at last year’s Venice film festival.

ArtReview said Goldin’s blend of personal intimacy and public advocacy had influenced a generation of artists and emboldened them to confront powers-that-be, from art museums to corporate sponsors and government­s.

Mark Rappolt, its editor-in-chief, said Goldin’s work had “anticipate­d many of the themes that are current in today’s culture: raw, confession­al autobiogra­phy, queer identity, intersecti­onal feminism, body autonomy and, of course, corporate ethics”.

Also on this year’s list at number eight is the British artist and film-maker Steve McQueen, whose film about the Grenfell Tower fire made the tragedy impossible to ignore. The Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija is at number 3, whose work encourages social interactio­n, and at number 2 is the German artist Hito Steyerl , who has made video essays on global capitalism and intervened in antisemiti­sm controvers­ies. Other artists in the top 10 include Simone Leigh, Isaac Julien and Ibrahim Mahama.

Artists take nearly 40% of the slots in this year’s power list, while curators make up a fifth. ArtReview said their access to big biennials and triennials made curators instrument­al in steering public discussion­s on issues such as the environmen­t and climate change (Lucia Pietroiust­i at 65), colonial and postcoloni­al histories (Natasha Ginwala at 94), the rights of Indigenous people (Candice Hopkins at 46) and the future of emerging technologi­es (Legacy Russell at 98).

The list also highlights the growth of art dealers and art fairs, including a handful of large, multi-continent commercial galleries, such as Larry Gagosian (12) and Mendes Wood DM (61), and art-fair chains such as Frieze (54) and Switzerlan­d’s Art Basel (51).

The list is chosen by 40 people from across the world. Last year, Indonesian collective the ruangrupa group topped the list, and before that, NFTs (non-fungible tokens) and Black Lives Matter.

This year’s top 10:

1. Nan Goldin

2. Hito Steyerl

3. Rirkrit Tiravanija 4. Simone Leigh

5. Isaac Julien

6. Ibrahim Mahama 7. Theaster Gates

8. Steve McQueen 9. Karrabing Film Collective 10. Cao Fei

 ?? Photograph: Nan Goldin, courtesy of National Gallery of Australia ?? Detail from Goldin’s Nan and Brian in bed, New York City, 1983.
Photograph: Nan Goldin, courtesy of National Gallery of Australia Detail from Goldin’s Nan and Brian in bed, New York City, 1983.
 ?? Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP ?? Nan Goldin founded the advocacy group Pain (Prescripti­on Addiction Interventi­on Now) after her own addiction to OxyContin.
Photograph: Seth Wenig/AP Nan Goldin founded the advocacy group Pain (Prescripti­on Addiction Interventi­on Now) after her own addiction to OxyContin.

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