New York Magazine - USA (2020-03-30)

(Antfer) #1

52 newyork| march30–april12, 2020


McGough found the
taxidermy puffin in
a shop in Iceland when
visiting there for a show.

“i don’t mind being alone. I like it,”


says artist Peter McGough from his West


Village apartment, where he is quaran-


tined along with his dog, Queenie. “I have


my books. I have all sorts of things to keep


me occupied.”


This past fall, he published a memoir, I’ve

Seen the Future and I’m Not Going: The Art


Scene and Downtown New York in the 1980s,


mostly about his years making art—con-


structing and then dogmatically living in an


entirely Victorian-style world—with David


McDermott, his onetime lover and art-


making partner. The two dressed as if they


were in a period film—top hats, detachable


collars—and even puttered around the city


in a Model T. Their work appeared in three


Whitney Biennials and was exhibited by


Cheim & Read in New York, Galerie Jerome


de Noirmont in Paris, and Bruno Bischof-


berger in Zurich, and they made the covers


of Artforum and Art in America. All the


while, they lived in an extraordinary man-


ner, whether it was in their 1840s townhouse


on Avenue C, lit by candles and heated with


wood-burning stoves, or in the 1865 Kings


County Savings Bank at the base of the Wil-


liamsburg Bridge, or in their 1790 house in


the Catskills. It was all grand in a Miss Hav-


isham kind of way. “Even when we lived in a


hovel,” McGough says, “we’d get a can of


paint and paint it. I found 18th-century fur-


niture in the garbage! I found velvet chairs


from the ’40s. People threw out so many


good things.” Nonetheless, they made a great


deal of money, overspent lavishly, then lost


much of what was left to back taxes. McDer-


mott moved to Ireland. McGough joined


him for a spell, then returned.


He moved to this apartment three years

ago from a 1930s building on Christopher


Street. His friend Fernando Santangelo, the


interior designer, had been living here (“It


was all white, and it was spars ished


with beautiful things,” McGo , and


when Santangelo moved out, McGough


moved in. It’s the only apartment in the


Fora show, hehadthe
phallus-leggedconsolemade,
basedona tablehesawin
CatherinetheGreat’s
collection.“I thought,Well,
nooneis goingtobuyit
anyway,sothisis goingtogo
rightinthefrontroom.”

“I bartered for that.
It’s that famous
360-degree 1933
sculpture of
Mussolini’s head
by Renato
Giuseppe Bertelli.”
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