An alluring homage to a time, a community, and a landscape that have long since vanished.
Jeremy Allen The New York Times
Eminent queer art historian Jonathan Weinberg makes the case for how powerfully gay male social life, cruising, and public sex were of a piece in the early days of LGBT liberation. In the wake of oppression that brutally enforced queer invisibility, a newly burgeoning movement sought to colonize public spaces for queer desires. Merging the political with the erotic, queer public spaces such as the piers have become quasi-mythic embodiments of gay life before AIDS changed everything. Weinberg here strips away the myth with a careful social history of the most influential, if unseen, crucible of gay liberation at the moment when the full meaning of that term was only beginning to be realized.
Jonathan D. Katz,author of Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture
A compelling memorial to a lost world.
Barry Reay Times Higher Education
Weinbergs careful research of these diverse practices makes for a meandering read, but one that offers surprising moments of beauty and coincidence as artists encounter each other on the waterfront.
Kyle Croft Art in America
Powerfully moving and full of life, Pier Groups immerses the reader in an episode on the literal fringe, the derelict Hudson waterfront of lower Manhattan, and makes it central to the legendary art scenes of the 1970s and 1980s. Vividly illustrated with new photographic discoveries, Jonathan Weinbergs fluent and searching work captures a vibrant lost community in which he plays a part as chronicler, interpreter, and participant.
Thomas E. Crow,author of The Long March of Pop: Art, Music, and Design, 19301995
Weinberg looks deeply into sexual cultures and artistic practices unfolding on the piers in the 1970s and considers the ways the art and cruising scenes are intercalated. His understanding of history, which rejects the logic of cause and effect, and his nonlinear approach to historical narration open new perspectives on artists about whom much has already been written.
Tirza Latimer,author of Women Together / Women Apart: Portraits of Lesbian Paris
The strength of Weinbergs book lies in its ability to illustrate to the reader the verisimilitude of life and activity at the piers . . . while also offering significant interpretations and reinterpretations of artworks, installations, and happenings.
Jeffrey Patrick Colgan Gotham Center for New York History
Visuals and stimulating text . . . will be a fascinating surprise to younger readers unaware of the activity in 1970s gay Manhattan. For older readers who remember this era of danger, sex, desire, and public cruising, the book is a time capsule from a bygone era where on the fringes of a vibrant city thrived a microcosm of the gay community where sex and art reigned supreme.
Jim Piechota Bay Area Reporter
An incredible contribution to gay history in particular and to American art history in general. . . . A valuable work of scholarship, but also a fascinating glimpse at a place and time that may be gone but which, thanks to Weinberg, will not be forgotten.
Martin Wilson The Gay & Lesbian Review
This game-changing book by Jonathan Weinberg draws on about a decade of research into the art made along Manhattans West Side piers. Its an important commentary on howand to whomvalue is assigned.
Maximiliano Duron ARTNews
What makes reading Weinbergs book significant within writing on queer art history is his specific focus on relation, both among the many queer men, such as David Wojnarowicz and Leonard Fink, who cruised and created within the piers and the straight artists, ranging from Gordon Matta-Clark to Vito Acconci, who made art there as well and responded to the same spaces.
Gabriel Chazan The Expanded Field
The author candidly frames his history with the admission that he, as an occasional participant in the life of the waterfront, may be prone to a certain nostalgia. Admirably, then, his book offers a markedly ambivalent picture of the piers.
Jack Parlett Burlington Magazine
Through first-person narration Weinberg delivers a captivating account of these intercalated boundary-pushing groups, merging over two decades of academic research with interviews, photographic documentation and his own vivid memories of cruising on the citys derelict waterfront as a youth.
Kabir Jhala The Art Newspaper
Along with its plentiful illustrations, the innovative tone of the book makes it an engaging read suitable for a wide readership in and outside of academia.
Daniel Fountain QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking
The most comprehensive look into a key period in New York Citys queer history which has long deserved to have its story told.
Ashleigh Kane Dazed
On the surface, the story of the Hudson Piers in the 70s was salacious. But its also a case study in occupying public space to create a community that became synonymous with artistic and sexual freedom.
CNN Style
Pier Groups is a work of scholarship that is both rigorously researched and movingly personal. But it is also, and no less urgently, a work of art.
Richard Meyer Art Bulletin