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Erotic City

40 Great Jones Street | New York, NY

March 13 – May 2, 2025

Betty Tompkins, Fuck Painting #60, 2019
Christabel MacGreevy, Good Omens, 2025
Claudia Renfro, The Devil and Two Damsels, 2024
Didier William, Take it Off, 2025
Duncan Hannah, Beatrix, 2018
Eunice Golden, Dreamscape #6, 1979
Helen Beard, Shut Up and Kiss Me, 2023
Jane Dickson, Live Girls – Knee Up, 1993
Jay Miriam, Looking for the Remote, 2025
Jimmy DeSana, Contact Paper, 1980
Joyce Kozloff, Pornament is Crime Series #29: Music Lessons, 1988
Jonathan Lyndon Chase, hooded lover, and their palace, 2023
Joan Semmel, Untitled Figure Study (from the Sex Paintings Series), c. 1971
Judith Bernstein, Dick in a Head - Avenger Series #15 (Orange Head, Blue Mouth), 2010
Kathy Ruttenberg, Man Screwing Nature, 2018
Keith Mayerson, Love Triumphant (James Dean in a Tree), 2013-2014
Katarina Janečková Walshe, To Do List, 2024
Kim Levin, ACTION PAINTING II, 1969
Lara Schnitger, The Artist is a Fountain, 2023
Laurie Simmons, Color Pictures/Deep Photos (Staircase/Orange Wall/Chair), 2007-2022
Lauren dela Roche, Raw Milk, 2025
Lee Lozano, Untitled, 1962
Letitia Quesenberry, BLSH 22, 2024
Louis Fratino, Untitled, 2017
Lucas Samaras, Untitled (Portrait of Barbara Long), 1957–58
Mary Frank, Untitled (Man and Woman), 1978
Marilyn Minter, Thigh Gap, 2016
Martha Edelheit, 1931-
Mia Weiner, sweet stick sweat, 2023
Marcus Leslie Singleton, Untitled, 2025
Mira Schor, Flesh, 2018
Olga Spiegel, Untitled, 1983
Paul Cadmus, Reclining Nude NM137, c.1974
Patrick Siler, Tall Penis Pot, 1969
Pierre le Riche, The Embrace, 2021
Rose Nestler, Ballet Bag, 2021
Rosalyn Drexler, Hooker, 1963
Sarah Faux, Half-wild, 2023
Sal Salandra, Present It, 2023
Sophie Larrimore, Everything's A Sandwich, 2025
Anita Steckel, Untitled, c. 1970s
Tom of Finland, Untitled (from "Circus"), 1975
William Christopher, Side Show, 1953
Hannah Wilke, So Help Me Hannah, 1978
Erotic City
Erotic City
Erotic City
Erotic City

Press Release

Helen Beard, Judith Bernstein, Paul Cadmus, Miriam Cahn, Jonathan Lyndon Chase, William R. Christopher, Jimmy DeSana, Lauren dela Roche, Jane Dickson, Rosalyn Drexler, Martha Edelheit, Sarah Faux, Mary Frank, Louis Fratino, Eunice Golden, Jenna Gribbon, Duncan Hannah, Jane Kogan, Joyce Kozloff, Sophie Larrimore, Pierre le Riche, Marcus Leslie Singleton, Kim Levin, Lee Lozano, Christabel MacGreevy, Keith Mayerson, Marilyn Minter, Jay Miriam, Rose Nestler, Janice Nowinski, Tom of Finland, Letitia Quesenberry, GaHee Park, Claudia Renfro, Kathy Ruttenberg, Sal Salandra, Mira Schor, Carolee Schneemann, Lara Schnitger, Joan Semmel, Patrick Siler, Laurie Simmons, Anita Steckel, Betty Tompkins, Katarina Janečková Walshe, Mia Weiner, Hannah Wilke, Didier William

Eric Firestone Gallery is pleased to present Erotic City, a group exhibition of over forty artists, curated by Martha Edelheit. Edelheit (b. 1931, New York, NY) is a pioneering artist whose work confronts dominant art historical paradigms, foregrounding female gaze and desire. Her lush and vivid work is at once critical, sensual, and humorous. An important voice for feminist art, she is known for both her frank depictions of sexuality and her insistence on their place within an art historical tradition and society. Edelheit, who has been represented by Eric Firestone Gallery since 2018, lived in Sweden from 1993 until 2024. Now in her 90s she once again lives and works in New York City. 

Edelheit writes of Erotic City

What is the difference between pornography and erotic art? I’m 93 years old. In our culture it wouldn’t be unusual to ask what someone my age is doing curating an erotic exhibition. While it may not be common knowledge, most of my peers still have erotic lives, some more active than others. Behind that sometimes bent and wrinkled exterior a very intense sensory life can still be functioning. Since the 1960s I’ve been doing work that has been called erotic. I never set out to do erotic drawings. I never thought of my work as erotic. I was drawing amusing stories I made up for myself. I can’t do these drawings, or stories, on demand. They happen to me. In 1959–60 a friend showed me his copy of the Japanese Pillow Book. It was my first encounter with erotica and it profoundly affected my imagination and art making. It is still the lens through which I view erotic art. A writer of novels once stated that “pornography is a book you read with one hand.” Erotic works are images and writings you can also look at with one hand. Concepts of the erotic and pornographic change over time, and reflect the culture and politics of the era. Religion and politics define what is and isn’t pornography or erotica. The erotic novels of D.H. Lawrence were condemned as pornography when first published. When I was twelve or thirteen years old the erotic book being passed under the desks in my public school was “Gone With the Wind”.

I think of pornography as cold, abusive, nonconsensual, painful, humiliating, mean, degrading, clinical. Pornography is a commercial endeavor. Money is exchanged for specific services rendered, either in person, film, books, pictures. It often supplies services for what is sometimes called deviant needs…..punishment, pain, humiliation, infantile fantasies. Stomping, spanking, beating, binding, hitting, exposing, choking, submission to a dominating person, or dominating someone else. It has a much clearer delineation than erotica.

I think of the erotic as sensual, nonviolent, consensual, warm, inviting, sometimes funny, witty, amusing. Erotica can include some of the pornographer's stock in trade, but it is lighter in touch, sometimes humorous, often witty, and aesthetically pleasurable. Erotica assumes shared association, touching, stroking, licking, looking, playing, exposing….it digresses, teases, laughs, arouses, without harming.

Genitalia, vaginas, breasts, and penises are not pornographic or erotic. They are normal mammal body parts, usually used in reproduction. They depend on context to become pornographic or erotic. 

While pornography will arouse, it will not delight. Pornography can give immediate physical relief. Erotica can arouse but it also can give lasting aesthetic pleasure on many levels.

I hope this small selection of what I and the Eric Firestone Gallery consider erotic imagery will give you, the viewers, that experience.

Martha Edelheit has selected over forty artists who express this vision of the erotic, with works ranging from the 1950s to the present. Erotic City includes both historic and contemporary artists and showcases artists whose sensual work would immediately come to mind—such as Joan Semmel and Marilyn Minter—alongside artists for whom the erotic has been a significant, though not always highlighted, focus. A public program related to the exhibition will be announced soon, for further exploration of its themes. We invite you to join us for the opening reception on March 13, from 6 to 8 p.m.

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