{"secondaryobjectnumber":null,"periodterms":[],"creditline":"Museum purchase, anonymous gift","caption":"Written by David Wojnarowicz (1954–1992; born Red Bank, NJ; died New York, NY), Illustrated by James Romberger (born 1958, Port Jefferson, NY; active New York, NY), Untitled, 1993. Screenprint; 69.4 x 91.5 cm, 76.2 x 101.6 cm (mat). Museum purchase, anonymous gift (x1993-211)","cultureterms":[{"id":2038492,"culture":"American"}],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","campus_art":false,"terms":[{"id":2054761,"term":"screen prints","aatid":300178688,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2038492,"term":"American","aatid":300107956,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2054256,"term":"prints","aatid":300041273,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2055657,"term":"figures (representations)","aatid":300189808,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2120449,"term":"flowers (plants)","aatid":300132399,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2135437,"term":"deaths","aatid":300151836,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2120885,"term":"comic books","aatid":300203177,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2122591,"term":"storyboards","aatid":300213156,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2088270,"term":"men","aatid":300025928,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2167714,"term":"printing ink","aatid":300187371,"termtype":"Materials"},{"id":2154563,"term":"screen printing","aatid":300053281,"termtype":"Techniques"}],"geography":[],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"mat","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"76.19"},{"element":"mat","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"101.59"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"69.40"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"91.50"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":"1993-01-01","newaccession":0,"makers":[{"id":1973,"displayname":"James Romberger","displaydate":"born 1958, Port Jefferson, NY; active New York, NY","datebegin":1958,"dateend":2100,"prefix":"Illustrated by","suffix":null,"role":"Artist","displaymaker":"Illustrated by James Romberger, born 1958, Port Jefferson, NY; active New York, NY","displayorder":2},{"id":2058,"displayname":"David Wojnarowicz","displaydate":"1954–1992; born Red Bank, NJ; died New York, NY","datebegin":1954,"dateend":1992,"prefix":"Written by","suffix":null,"role":"Artist","displaymaker":"Written by David Wojnarowicz, 1954–1992; born Red Bank, NJ; died New York, NY","displayorder":1}],"datecomputed":1993,"signed":"Signed in graphite, lower right: JAMES","restrictions":"Restricted Download - Under Copyright","classification":"Prints","packages":[{"packageid":212549,"name":"2022_STC209A/EGR209A/MUS 209A_03_23"},{"packageid":218868,"name":"2022_FRS127_10_04"},{"packageid":184819,"name":"web_SOH_1"},{"packageid":192904,"name":"web_2020_WorldAIDSDay"},{"packageid":194314,"name":"PUAM_States of Health"},{"packageid":196672,"name":"CRS_2020_ElenaFratto_too big"},{"packageid":236084,"name":"2023_FRS127_10_03"},{"packageid":181527,"name":"CRS_2020_WRI163_03_30"},{"packageid":181971,"name":"CRS_2020_ANT240/HUM240_03_25"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[{"id":2054256,"classification":"prints"},{"id":2054761,"classification":"screen prints"}],"exhibitions":[{"exhibitionid":3617,"citation":"States of Health: Visualizing Illness and Healing (November 2, 2019 –Sunday, February 2, 2020)","isvirtual":true,"begindate":"2019-11-02","enddate":"2020-02-02","uri":"https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/3617"},{"exhibitionid":3974,"citation":"\"What is an American?\": Artists Reflect Saturday, May 16, 2026 - Sunday, November 1, 2026","isvirtual":true,"begindate":"2026-05-16","enddate":"2026-11-01","uri":"https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/3974"}],"cultures":[],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/INV09265"],"displaytitle":"Untitled","displayculture":null,"displaymaker":"Written by David Wojnarowicz, 1954–1992; born Red Bank, NJ; died New York, NY | Illustrated by James Romberger, born 1958, Port Jefferson, NY; active New York, NY","alt_numbers":[],"captionhtml":"Written by David Wojnarowicz (1954–1992; born Red Bank, NJ; died New York, NY), Illustrated by James Romberger (born 1958, Port Jefferson, NY; active New York, NY), <i>Untitled</i>, 1993. Screenprint; 69.4 x 91.5 cm, 76.2 x 101.6 cm (mat). Museum purchase, anonymous gift (x1993-211)","displaydate":"1993","medium":"Screenprint","media":[{"id":76235,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/INV09265","isprimary":1,"rank":1,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":"Restricted Download - Under Copyright","caption":"Inventory Project"}],"displayperiod":null,"extended_content":true,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[{"boilertext":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1993\", <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 53, no.&nbsp;1 (1994): p. 46-95.","citation":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1993\", <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 53, no.&nbsp;1 (1994): p. 46-95., p. 68","date":1994,"id":3065,"uri":"https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774684"}],"nowebuse":"False","periods":[],"department":"Prints and Drawings","attribute_groups":[{"id":2199324,"term":"Art Since 1945","termtype":"Collecting Area"},{"id":2199325,"term":"North American Art","termtype":"Collecting Area"},{"id":2199327,"term":"Prints and Drawings","termtype":"Collecting Area"}],"daterange":"A.D. 1945-present","dateend":1993,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"Untitled","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":"© the artist and the estate of David Wojnarowicz","objectnumber":"x1993-211","inscribed":"Numbered in graphite, lower left: 11/50\r\nStamped in ink, lower right [in a circle, around an image of a burning house]: ESTATE OF DAVID WOJNAROWICZ\r\n","texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"<p>\n\tExtracted from Wojnarowicz’s posthumously published autobiographical comic, Seven Miles a Second, this scene captures moments of emotional turmoil following the death from AIDS of Wojnarowicz’s friend and former lover, the photographer Peter Hujar. In various writings, Wojnarowicz reflected on “Being Queer in America”:\n</p>\n<p>\n\t“I was diagnosed with Aids recently and this\n\t<br />\n\twas after the last few years of losing count\n\t<br />\n\tof the friends and neighbors who have been\n\t<br />\n\tdying slow and vicious and unnecessary\n\t<br />\n\tdeaths because fags and dykes and junkies\n\t<br />\n\tare expendable in this country. . . . and I wake\n\t<br />\n\tup every morning in this killing machine called\n\t<br />\n\tamerica and I’m carrying this rage like a blood\n\t<br />\n\tfilled egg . . . and [there are] areas of the u.s.a.\n\t<br />\n\twhere it is possible to murder a man and when\n\t<br />\n\tbrought to trial one only has to say that the victim\n\t<br />\n\twas a queer and that he tried to touch you and\n\t<br />\n\tthe courts will set you free.”\n</p>","remarks":"Mele Gallery Rotation \"What is an American?\": Artists Reflect "},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Campus Voices","textentryhtml":"<p>Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) was clinically reported in the United States, although not yet named, in 1981. Until the advent of antiviral drugs in the mid-1990s, no effective treatments existed. The epidemic first aggressively infiltrated marginalized populations such as the queer community and intravenous drug users, creating a stigma that exacerbated the trauma to patients and their loved ones. David Wojnarowicz used his art to confront these and other related social-justice issues. In 1986 the cartoonist James Romberger began working with Wojnarowicz on a graphic memoir of the latter’s life, from his years as a homeless teenager to his struggles with AIDS. Romberger continued to work on the project after Wojnarowicz’s death, publishing <em>7 Miles a Second</em> in 1996. This screenprint of one of the layouts merges the format of the graphic novel with an illness narrative, conveying failure, loss, and moving expressions of love.</p><p><strong>Student response:</strong></p><span lang=\"EN\"></span><p align=\"LEFT\" dir=\"LTR\"><font face=\"Calibri\">In the midst of a global pandemic and at the height of the Black Lives Matter movement, I, like David Wojnarowicz, am angry. As a young gay person from the Midwest, I have been denied any sort of \"positive\" queer cultural inheritance. In fact, the queerness I have inherited has been molded significantly by the AIDS crisis. In the gay community, I have observed sexual anxiety and a desire for assimilation</font>,<font face=\"Calibri\"> as well as white supremacy and a still</font>-<font face=\"Calibri\">prevalent disgust toward HIV</font>-<font face=\"Calibri\">positive people. These all linger as effects of the rigorously regressive moral politics of the 1980s and ’90s. In the 1980s, a time where sexual liberation was at its height, the appearance of \"Gay-Related Immune Deficiency\" lent right-wing politicians an excuse to erroneously link homosexuality to immorality. My generation (along with, of course, our elders) is still working to erase those pernicious residues. </font></p><p><font face=\"Calibri\">\n<p align=\"LEFT\" dir=\"LTR\"> </p><p>\n<font face=\"Calibri\">Although I would love to read this piece as beautifully intimate, an eternally apolitical cry for <i>more time</i> in the arms of a dying lover, I don’t think it would be what David Wojnarowicz, the activist who is my namesake, would have wanted. The violence he represents in this scene reminds me not only of the atrophy of the AIDS</font>-<font face=\"Calibri\">ravaged body, but also of the destruction of the queer subject by the administrations and institutions who, during this crisis, would rather we had died than be accepted. </font></p></font></p><p><font face=\"Calibri\">\n<p align=\"LEFT\" dir=\"LTR\"> </p><p>\nNow, still feeling the repercussions of our denial to life (BIPOC and trans people most prominently), my generation has been tasked with making up for lost time. </p><p>\n<font face=\"Calibri\">David Timm ’22<p><br></p></font></p></font></p><p><br></p><p><br></p>","remarks":"SAB students respond to World Aid's Day"}],"datebegin":1993,"sortnumber":"1993  211x","published_date":"2026-05-16 02:00:20.484290","objectid":18640,"dimensions":"69.4 x 91.5 cm. (27 5/16 x 36 in.)\r\nmat: 76.2 x 101.6 cm. (30 x 40 in.)","on_view":true}