David Wojnarowicz’s Shop Posters series (1983-85) raises a critique of the systems of value production that regulate social exchange. The discarded “sale of the week” posters upon which David screenprinted his designs were created with the help of art director Keith Davis, who found the posters and allowed David to use his silkscreen equipment to create them.
By inserting a living hand and collaborative artistic vision into the process of automated production, David raises questions of whether the collective shaping of such posters is revelatory, or was already there, intrinsic to the consumerist image. Works such as “Jean Genet Masturbating in Metteray Prison (London Broil),” 1983, printed over a butcher’s advertisement reading “USDA Choice Beef Shoulder—London Broil,” juxtapose erotic and food imagery, reflecting themes of sustenance, accessibility, and desperation, as well as the permittance of certain forms of imagery over others in public space.
The posters (and painting of a shop poster, “Queer Basher/Icarus Falling”, 1986) seem at home in their surroundings, yet also to expose them. They are at once intimate and communal, acts of questioning and affirmation, descriptions of spaces, refusals of delineations between public and private, retakings of visibility on one’s own terms, and social diagnoses. But are they advertisements?
— Ray Atlas, David Wojnarowicz Foundation Fellow, Spring 2026
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IMAGES:
“Jean Genet Masturbating in Metteray Prison (London Broil),”1983; “Queer Basher/Icarus Falling,” 1986. Spray paint and acrylic on board, 72 × 48 in; “Savarin Coffee,” 1983. Synthetic polymer paint on supermarket poster, 43 1/2 × 32 in; “Chicken Legs,” 1983. Collage, screenprint, and string, 33 1/2 × 24 1/2 in.