The Norwalk Hour

A portrait of an artist in Venice-winning doc

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Nan Goldin, the subject of Laura Poitras’ Venice Film Festival-winning documentar­y “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” is a name you probably either know well or not at all. In the art world, she is unequivoca­lly famous. Her photograph­s depicting downtown life in the late 1970s and ‘80s have been displayed at the Whitney, the Tate and MoMA. AP Film writer Lindsey Bahr writes in her review that it is a riveting, holistic portrait of an artist who has devoted her life to removing stigma whether with the AIDS crisis or the opioid epidemic. The film, now playing in New York from Neon, is not rated.

Nan Goldin, the subject of Laura Poitras’ Venice Film Festival-winning documentar­y “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” is a name you probably either know well or not at all. In the art world, she is unequivoca­lly famous. Her photograph­s depicting downtown life in the late 1970s and ‘80s and the vibrant, glamorous bohemians she encountere­d on the scene, like John Waters It-Girl Cookie Mueller, have been displayed at the Whitney, the Tate and MoMA.

To look at any of the photos in her most well-known work, the ever-evolving slideshow “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency,” you can see how influentia­l she was on generation­s to come with her raw, public-private snapshots of parties that didn’t end until dawn, beautiful “queens” and even her face, one month after a “dope-sick” boyfriend beat her so badly she almost lost her eye. The New York Times review of a collection of those photograph­s at the time said that “The Ballad” was to the 1980s what Robert Frank’s “The Americans” was to the 1950s. And it would become a devastatin­g document of many of the young lives lost in the AIDS epidemic.

This is only part of Goldin’s story, as you’ll learn in “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” which begins its theatrical run this week in New York before expanding to more markets in the coming weeks. Poitras, the Oscar-winning filmmaker behind “Citizenfou­r,” started filming Goldin to document her protest efforts against museums accepting money from the Sackler family. Their company, Purdue Pharma, developed and marketed the widely prescribed and widely abused painkiller OxyContin, which has been linked to more than 500,000 deaths in the U.S. over the past two decades.

“All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,” a NEON release in limited release now, expanding on, has not been rated by the Motion Picture Associatio­n. Running time: 117 minutes.

 ?? Associated Press ?? This image released by Neon shows Nan Goldin, left, and Bea Boston in an image used for the documentar­y “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed.”
Associated Press This image released by Neon shows Nan Goldin, left, and Bea Boston in an image used for the documentar­y “All the Beauty and the Bloodshed.”

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