Account
Duncan Hannah, Artist and ’70s Chronicler, Dies
at 69
He immersed himself in the wild New York scene of
Warhol and CBGB, then emerged in the ’80s as a respected painter.
Neil
Genzlinger
By Neil
Genzlinger
Published
June 15, 2022
Updated
June 16, 2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/15/arts/duncan-hannah-dead.html
Duncan
Hannah, who immersed himself in the boisterous art-and-club scene of 1970s New
York — vividly documenting it in a 2018 book drawn from diaries he kept — and
then in the 1980s became a well-regarded artist himself, died on Saturday at
his home in Cornwall, Conn. He was 69.
His wife,
Megan Wilson, said the cause was a heart attack.
As an
artist, Mr. Hannah was known for scenes that evoked old films and old Europe
and that owed a debt to Edward Hopper and Winslow Homer, whom he admired. But
they also had a vaguely eerie quality. Michael Kimmelman, reviewing an
exhibition of Mr. Hannah’s work at the Phyllis Kind Gallery in New York for The
New York Times in 1988, was struck by a painting called “News of the World.”
“Against a
beautiful mauve-pink-gray sky, a boy carries a newspaper through a nearly empty
town,” Mr. Kimmelman wrote. “The place is at once ordinary and totally unreal.
This is the heart of Mr. Hannah’s terrain — a curious, half-dream,
half-nightmare landscape just on the edge of no place.”
“When I
exhibited his paintings throughout the 1980s,” he said by email, “a wide
audience responded to their dreamy teleportation to a time of innocence, their
Cézannesque brushstrokes, their sense of mystery.”
Many
artists were exploring abstraction at the time, and some critics, Mr. Hannah
admitted, didn’t seem to get what he was doing.
“They just
assumed I was being ironic and this was some kind of critique of art history,
which it wasn’t,” he told “CBS This Morning” in 2018. “It was more of a love
letter to art history.”
Mr.
Blinderman watched as Mr. Hannah’s style gradually attracted a following.
“It took a
while before the cognoscenti acknowledged the work’s criticality — its deadpan
delivery of displacement through the lens of film, its ‘learned irony,’ as
termed by Times critic John Russell,” he said, referring to a 1983 review in
The Times. “Duncan now stands at his easel beside Balthus, Hopper, Bonnard and
Sickert.”
Before he
broke through as an artist, Mr. Hannah was — as he himself would surely have
acknowledged — the very definition of a “scene-maker,” logging time at CBGB and
other hot clubs and hanging with the Warhol crowd.
“I’ve
always been interested in scenes,” he told The Times in 2016, when his artworks
were being exhibited at New Release, a gallery in Chinatown. “Even scenes that
aren’t mine, like Swinging London, the Beat scene or Paris in the ’20s. So when
I got to New York, I wanted to find the scene or make the scene. Whatever was
going on, I wanted to find the center of it. And I still do, I suppose.”
He was a
distinctive figure in those years, sometimes working a dapper,
attention-getting look that one writer described as “a Bogart-style trench coat
and tightly knotted tie amid a sea of torn T-shirts and safety-pinned leather
jackets.”
He seemed
to be everywhere, yet he found time to keep diaries, from which he drew to
create one of the livelier and more explicit portraits of that time and place,
“20th Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies” (2018). The book is
anecdote-rich and full of famous names: Mr. Hannah told of finding himself in a
limousine with Warhol, Bryan Ferry and David Bowie; of visiting a friend’s
apartment, finding the singer Nico there and making her a cocktail; of
repelling an unwanted proposition from Allen Ginsberg. It’s also full of 1970s
excesses.
Anna Sui,
the acclaimed fashion designer, was, like Mr. Hannah, a native of the Midwest
who navigated her way to New York. For a time she lived on the same Manhattan
block as Mr. Hannah, frequently attending parties at his place.
“We escaped
middle-class suburbia in the Midwest for the ’70s New York underground and
lived out our fantasies of rock stars and movie heroes,” Ms. Sui said by email.
“Duncan was the prettiest, most stylish and cool guy around during the CBGB’s
days.”
In the
preface to his book, Mr. Hannah reflected on his immersion in the wild ’70s
scene.
“Our quest
for authenticity and experience led us in colorful directions,” he wrote. “We
had faith in the journey, even if we were unsure of the destination.”
Duncan
Rathbun Hannah was born on Aug. 21, 1952, in Minneapolis. His father, James,
was a lawyer, and his mother, Rosemary (Rathbun) Hannah, was an interior
decorator. He had already begun keeping a journal when he graduated from high
school in Minneapolis, and the entries reveal a young man eager to broaden his
horizons.
“I’ve been
accepted to Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, so it’s the East Coast for me
next fall,” he wrote. “I’ll put myself in odd situations. I won’t avoid
challenges, I will uncover my true grit. I’ll exhaust my resources and keep
pushing through.”
He arrived
in New York in 1971 and after two years at Bard transferred to the Parsons
School of Design in Manhattan, graduating in 1975.
His
activities in the 1970s included appearing in two underground films directed by
Amos Poe, both of which also starred Debbie Harry of Blondie: “Unmade Beds”
(1976) and “The Foreigner” (1978). He made a handful of other film appearances,
but in the “CBS This Morning” interview years later, he acknowledged that his
strengths were in other areas.
“I realized
appreciating good acting and executing good acting are two very different
things,” he said.
If he spent
the 1970s sampling almost everything the punk scene had to offer, he left much
of that behind when the decade ended and he became more serious about his art.
“I’ve been
bathing in the light of sobriety for several months now,” he wrote at the start
of an unpublished follow-up to “20th Century Boy” that was drawn from his
journal entries from the 1980s. “Off the booze, off the drugs. Taking stock of
my life.”
“It’s not
as though I’m without my vices,” he added. “I drink a pot of coffee a day, and
smoke 20-30 Camel filters. There is of course sex, although I’m not at all sure
that constitutes a vice.”
His
inclusion in the Times Square Show, a seminal group exhibition in 1980 that
also included Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, put his art career in
motion. In a 2016 interview with The Times, he recalled the surprise of a
friend who in the early 1980s had come to his first solo show and seen his
throwback works for the first time.
“‘Is this
what you do? These are like real paintings,’” he recalled the friend saying.
“His message was clear: ‘I thought you were cool!’ Well, I love painting. To
me, Whistler is cool. Vuillard is really cool.”
In addition
to his wife, Mr. Hannah is survived by a sister, Holly Lewis.
Mr. Hannah,
who had homes in Cornwall and Brooklyn, reconnected with Ms. Sui years after
their shared ’70s experiences. She said he would attend her fashion shows and
enjoyed inviting friends to lunch at the Century Association, the Manhattan
arts and dining club.
“Duncan had
come full circle,” she said, “creating his wonderful life, sober and so proud
of the fact that he had always supported himself as a working artist.”
Neil
Genzlinger is a writer for the Obituaries desk. Previously he was a television,
film and theater critic. More about Neil Genzlinger
Twentieth-Century Boy: Notebooks of the Seventies
by Duncan Hannah (Author)
A
rollicking account of a celebrated artist's coming of age, full of outrageously
bad behavior, naked ambition, fantastically good music, and evaporating
barriers of taste and decorum, and featuring cameos from David Bowie, Andy
Warhol, Patti Smith, and many more.
"A
phantasmagoria of alcohol, sex, art, conversation, glam rock, and New Wave
cinema. Hannah's writing combines self-aware humor with an intoxicating punk
energy." --The New Yorker
Painter
Duncan Hannah arrived in New York City from Minneapolis in the early 1970s as
an art student hungry for experience, game for almost anything, and with a
prodigious taste for drugs, girls, alcohol, movies, rock and roll, books,
parties, and everything else the city had to offer. Taken directly from the
notebooks Hannah kept throughout the decade, Twentieth-Century Boy is a
fascinating, sometimes lurid, and incredibly entertaining report from a now
almost mythical time and place.
The Thin White Dunc: A Jaded Dandy in 1970s New
York
July 25,
2018 •
By Anthony Mostrom
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/the-thin-white-dunc-a-jaded-dandy-in-1970s-new-york/
Twentieth-Century
Boy
DUNCAN
HANNAH
YOU
PROBABLY HAVEN’T HEARD of Duncan Hannah, a New York–based painter and
illustrator, though there’s a somewhat famous, mid-’70s photo of him lounging
in a rattan chair next to a bathing-suit-clad Debbie Harry. The image comes
from an obscure 1976 art film called Unmade Beds, an amateurish, charming New
York time capsule directed by Amos Poe (neither Hannah nor Harry could act).
Hannah will
now be known as a diarist. As he notes in his new book Twentieth-Century Boy:
Notebooks of the Seventies: “This is not a memoir. These are journals, begun in
1970 at the age of seventeen, written as it happened, filled with youthful
indiscretions.”
Arriving in
New York City from Minnesota, thin and wispy young Duncan is already well read
and culturally hip — and not lockstep hip either, but rather a precocious
contrarian. In art, he likes comic books, illustrators, and, most of all, David
Hockney. To his credit, he tells his knee-jerk-avant art teachers at Bard
College that he likes the Pre-Raphaelites. (“They shook their heads…” Well, of
course they did. Of course they did.) He paints portraits of his offbeat
literary heroes (e.g., Wyndham Lewis, Colin Wilson), which itself is kind of
odd, and exhibits them in a group show, “in spite of not fitting in with the
show’s agenda.”
Most of
this book recounts our young rake meeting almost everyone important in his two
worlds of art and music: Hockney, Warhol, Henry Geldzahler, Larry Rivers, David
Bowie, Brian Eno, Bryan Ferry. A precocious dialectician, he can spar with the
best — and worst — of them:
Danny
shouts, “Louis, Louis, come join us!” looking at the entrance to the back room.
I crane my neck to see who he is talking to. Gulp. Standing there in an
alcoholic stupor, looking into my eyes, is the avatar of decadence and
perversion, the legendary Lou Reed!
Creepy Reed
lopes over to their table and whispers a truly stomach-turning proposition to
our young diarist, which I won’t describe here. Appalled, Hannah becomes an
ex-fan: “My hero worship is immediately over. Ick. […] He downs the rest of his
tequila and leaves me alone in the booth to ponder my missed scatological
opportunity.” It’s telling that Hannah, who lets the reader know that he has
excised much from these journals, decided to leave this story in. Later on, he
spots Reed at Max’s Kansas City, looking “like a skinny chimpanzee.”
Our
narrator’s musings reach a peak of quotability whenever he’s witnessing the
sorry truth about his heroes:
Fran
Lebowitz sits with us and complains about her latest trick. [New York] Dolls
drummer Jerry Nolan comes in with a gaudy chick in leopard skin, zippers, and
frosted hair. Real skanky. Fran slips off …
Hannah also
displays a shrewd ear for good music versus trash:
Bryan Ferry
never disappoints […] Hawkwind […] weren’t to my taste. Queen […] I don’t like.
[…] Television is sounding better and better. Lenny Kaye called them “the
golden apple at the top of the tree.”
[D]rove to
Edgar Winter’s house on Sands Point, Long Island. This is Fitzgerald country,
the fictional East Egg […] Gatsby! Yet inside this mansion was a rock band,
dressed in their glitter sneakers and spandex, playing pinball machines and
watching crap TV. Oblivious […] Pearls before swine, I thought to myself. We
listened to a rough mix of their new album, which sounded lame […] Just loud,
boring product for dullard youths. Rock ‘n roll can be incredibly stupid.
At what
must have been the greatest New York rock-star party that ever happened, at the
Academy of Music in June 1974, he sidles up to both Bryan Ferry, who’s distant
and distracted, and David Bowie, who’s friendly, engaging, and witty:
He graced
me with a glance, and I asked him if he was collecting material for a new song
at this very minute. He sneered his canines at me and said, “Yah, why, do you
wanna be in my song?”
I sneered
back, “Yah, what about it?” We kept up our grimaces like a couple of thugs,
necks outstretched, until he broke out laughing.
Meanwhile,
in the art scene, minimalism is in full swing, but Duncan is (appropriately)
unmoved. His stubborn conservatism, though, seems possibly to have cost him a
more high-profile art career in such a ripe time and place. Hockney himself
pays a visit and critiques his work (“Your drawing is a bit heavy-handed in the
American fashion”), but progress remains slow, and he resists painting
“something conceptual […] [s]omething that had quotes around it.” Regardless,
Hannah’s days in New York were clearly tilted more in favor of “the life” (sex,
drugs, and parties).
You might
assume that our young-and-waify hero proceeded to screw his way willy-nilly
through the gender-bending, glammy ’70s, this being the comparatively carefree,
pre-AIDS era. But though his wolf-baiting good looks and friendliness are a
constant magnet to a parade of lecherous males, he remains, steadfastly,
straight as a razor.
The budding
sociologist in Hannah (all of 22 here) is sharp-eyed when recalling a party at
“the old Factory”:
This is the
place where trigger-happy Valerie Solanas shot Andy. Creepy. They used to shoot
laser beams from up here across the park into Max’s. I feel the party’s force
fields, currents of strength, currents of weakness. “The love that dare not
speak its name” just won’t shut up these days. Gayness has lost its underground
status in NYC and is busy becoming the dominant sensibility. Lots of
affectation. Sad when things turn to parody.
A short
detour through London in August 1972 (“We sit at the dark basement bar and
eyeball a couple of likely-looking English lasses, in their ‘frock coats and
bipperty-bopperty hats’”) contains yet another best-possible-time-and-place
music pilgrimage I can’t help but envy:
Robert
Wyatt’s new group, Matching Mole, play. I love them. Then it’s Roy Wood’s
Wizzard, who look ridiculous but sound great.
At
intermission, we drank vodka […] and wound up talking to a forward young girl
named Mary. […] Mary said she liked effeminate boys and I nudged her over to
the doorway […] and kissed her and felt up her tits.
Bingo,
glam-rock-era success! (This episode aside, the book is disappointingly scant
on pornographic details, despite the number of conquests it chronicles.) Our
thin white duke’s 20th birthday is summarily ruined, however, when his
androgynous looks and excessive drinking in a London gay bar lead to what he
calls a “near-rape experience,” the one truly frightening episode in the book.
While the
party girls and the art-student girls keep on “flying low” for our handsome
young buck, the picaresque life is starting to wear him down:
I smell
like booze all the time now, but it’s expensive booze for a change. Perpetual
hangover. […] I’m living faster than I can write. Not that I actually have
something to write about. There’s no time to do it.
Everything
turns sour. “The next chapter of this blackout finds me alone…” Hannah realizes
he’s an alcoholic. A “real” girlfriend in his life (a rarity) turns out to be
nuts:
Terry was
hearing voices in her head, and she stabbed me in the chest with a small
penknife she keeps in her bag. The little blade bounced off a bone. Ouch! This
because the voices were teasing her about my so-called “harem.” “Terry, there
is no harem!” But the voices insisted.
There is
much tottering down smelly New York alleyways in platform shoes during many a
besotted dawn. It’s a pungent, Scorsese’d-out New York that wafts up from these
pages: “It’s hard to unravel people’s origins in New York. They act cagey.
Suspicious”; neurosis in the air “mistaken for energy […] the new pissiness”;
“[p]eople fall apart all the time.”
As a final
flourish, our now jaded dandy is disappointed when he visits grumpy Ned Rorem,
who doesn’t come on to him at all but is actually a rather unfriendly old fuck.
But Dunc is unfazed. To quote from an old blues song: “His disposition takes
him through this world.”
Twentieth-Century
Boy is a breezy, demotically precise portrait of Bowie-and-Warhol New York,
splayed like a passed-out wino on every page. Hannah, who has no regrets and
still looks young, now lives in New York and Connecticut.
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