
My fascination with the gaudy and über-'80s lithographs of
Patrick Nagel started in about 1990 when I was known to frequent, frequently, a now-bygone coffee house in San Jose called
The Phoenix. I've wanted to write about the Phoenix for years, and I may yet get around to an installment of Vintage Bree about the history of cafés-past in my life, but the thing that is germane to this story is that the upstairs of the Phoenix was lined with dozens of framed Nagel prints. The aesthetic of the café was generally more palatable than that, with minimal décor and ample seating, but for some reason, the upstairs was crowded with Nagels. This prompted
B. and I to write a song about them called "Women on the Walls," in which we extolled the eerie omnipresence of Nagel's women in the café and imagined the highly dramatic stories of their lives. The song, earnest only in its minor chords, a total product of our collective early-twenties angst, became a camp classic among our friends for many years. It even utilized
Berkeleyan principles (ripped naïvely from the Western philosophy class I was taking at the junior college at the time) in a refrain presenting the Women and then flippantly erasing them from consciousness with the bat of a heavily mascara'd eye. While the song remained a party trick for a number of years, it faded into obscurity just like other songs I'd written with friends from that era, many penned at the Phoenix, until B. and I had a rare opportunity to showcase it in public.
It was November of 1997, and
Mag &
Ana had organized
Nagel Night at
Trannyshack, the local irreverent underground drag club. The ode included many fabulous performers lip-synching to Eighties songs, arty send-ups of Nagel's portraits, and even a (very tasteful!) dramatic reenactment (lovingly rendered by our friend Dingo Chan) of Patrick Nagel's tragically ironic death scene (he had died in 1984 of a heart attack after doing 15 minutes of cardiovascular exercise in a charity event for the
American Heart Association). Take a moment to absorb that last sentence, please.
B. and I, not in drag, nor Eighties pancake makeup, nor lip-synching, were a bit oddball in this clamour of oddness. It was the two of us on stage, with my acoustic guitar, singing this sort of hippy dirge in our very untrained voices. And now, at long last, for the first time ever at
Toothpick Labeling, I present to you the original song, newly recorded in crystal clear digital!
5 comments:
As much as I do, on one level, love to hate Nagel's work for its very so-bad-it's-good qualities, there is another part of me that honestly values his references to Japanese woodblock printing. I sometimes wonder if part of the so-bad really only comes from their hideous ubiquity and their association with the big '80s cheese-pop of Duran Duran by way of their two album covers which they graced.
ever marveling...
Just came back to listen to the recording. I love it! And this entry.
If a Nagel hanging on the wall falls to the floor and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound?
Love the song...especially the "Barnes and Barnesesque" ending (the only way I might improve upon it would be to replace "hmmmmmm" with "yeahhhhhhhhh" :^D). The synchronicity of finding an avid Nagel collector the very next day is quite funny. I, of course, have all kinds of odd Nagel-related memories (having been sentient in the 80s when his work seemed ubiquitous)--I recall a poster shop on the Pacific Garden Mall of Santa Cruz called Graphix that seemed to feature a different scantily-clad Nagel girl in the front window every week. Anyway...Nagel has always seemed like a derivative of Vargas (replacing soft, airbrush technique with crisp, angular lithography). I think they even both occupied the same coveted "centerfold"-adjascent placement in Playboy for many years.
Thanks for the fun nostalgia--so bad it's good, indeed!
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