Current:Home > MyHow one artist took on the Sacklers and shook their reputation in the art world -VisionFunds
How one artist took on the Sacklers and shook their reputation in the art world
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:02:07
The first couple times I talked with photographer Nan Goldin, I saw her rage and frustration over the prescription opioid epidemic that derailed her life and killed tens of thousands of Americans.
"I've never seen such an abuse of justice," Goldin told me.
She was talking about members of the Sackler family, who own Purdue Pharma, the maker of Oxycontin.
Goldin herself became addicted to pain pills after surgery. She later came to believe the Sacklers lied about their drug's safety and were unlikely to be held accountable.
"It's shocking. It's really shocking. I've been deeply depressed and horrified," she said.
What I missed in those encounters with Goldin — hidden behind the chain smoking and the weary laugh — was the power, stubbornness and battle-hardened courage that helped her take on the Sacklers.
That's the revelation in the new documentary about Goldin, All The Beauty and The Bloodshed, out now in limited release. It won the Gold Lion for best film this year at the Venice International Film Festival.
The film by Laura Poitras shows Goldin growing up in an abusive family, surviving foster care and living homeless in New York City.
Goldin clawed her way into the art world as one of the rawest most powerful photographers of her generation. To pay the bills — and cover the cost of film — Goldin often danced in strip clubs and did sex work.
"Photography was always a way to walk through fear," Goldin says in the documentary. "It gave me a reason to be there."
She was later one of the earliest American artists to take on the AIDS epidemic, mounting a show in the late 1980s that drew national attention and controversy.
The Sackler family, meanwhile, was growing fabulously wealthy, first by selling Valium and then aggressively marketing Oxycontin.
Many of the same museums around the world that were beginning to collect Goldin's photographs were also naming buildings after the Sacklers — in exchange for lavish donations.
The collision between the Sacklers and Goldin portrayed in this film came after Goldin's recovery from years of opioid addiction, a time she describes as "a darkness of the soul."
After reading about the Sacklers' role pushing Oxycontin sales in a groundbreaking article in The New Yorker, Goldin decided to challenge their carefully curated public image as enlightened philanthropists.
"All the museums and institutions need to stop taking money from these corrupt evil bastards," Goldin says in the documentary, as she helps organize one of the opioid protests that rocked the art world over the last five years.
It wasn't clear Goldin's campaign would work. The Sacklers ranked among the most widely respected and deeply connected art patrons.
"The museums...tried to pretend it wasn't happening," said director Laura Poitras in an interview with NPR. "None of them responded."
But Goldin kept pushing, mounting more protests and publishing a scathing personal essay in the influential journal Artforum.
"She knew how to use her power. She's a figure these museums wanted to work with," says David Velasco, Artforum's editor in chief, in the documentary.
It's important to say the Sacklers have long denied any wrongdoing.
Their company has twice pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges relating to opioid marketing and Purdue Pharma is now in bankruptcy.
But members of the Sackler family who directed the company and profited from opioid sales have never been charged with any crime.
While they've given up control of their company and are expected to pay billions of dollars as part of a settlement deal, they are likely to retain much of their wealth.
They have, however, faced a different kind of accountability.
In bestselling books such as Empire of Pain: The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty, the book and award-winning television series Dopesick, and this new documentary, the Sacklers have faced a kind of public shaming.
The Sackler name has been stripped from buildings and exhibition spaces in the Guggenheim, the Louvre, the Met, and other top cultural and educational institutions around the world.
In my conversations with Goldin, she's described this as a thin sort of victory, weighed against the carnage of an opioid crisis that's still raging.
Hundreds of thousands of Americans have already died. Fatal overdoses, driven now mostly by the illicit street opioid fentanyl, hit a devastating new record in 2021.
In the documentary, however, Goldin allows herself a moment of triumph. She walks through an exhibition space in the Met, where the Sackler name has been scoured from the wall.
"Congress didn't do anything, the Justice Department didn't do anything," Goldin says. "This is the only place they're being held accountable, the only place. We did it."
veryGood! (8963)
Related
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Binge and bail: How 'serial churners' save money on Netflix, Hulu and Disney
- Families of those killed in the 2002 Bali bombings testify at hearing for Guantanamo detainees
- France’s constitutional court is ruling on a controversial immigration law. Activists plan protests
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- The Mexican National Team's all-time leading goal scorer, Chicharito, returns to Chivas
- Japan’s Fukushima nuclear plant further delays removal of melted fuel debris
- Group can begin gathering signatures to get public records measure on Arkansas ballot
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- A child dies after being rescued along with 59 other Syrian migrants from a boat off Cyprus
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- US and UK sanction four Yemeni Houthi leaders over Red Sea shipping attacks
- Iran disqualifies former moderate president from running for reelection to influential assembly
- Pakistan accuses Indian agents of orchestrating the killing of 2 citizens on its soil
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Chiefs vs. Ravens AFC championship game weather forecast: Rain expected all game
- Ohio bans gender-affirming care for minors, restricts transgender athletes over Gov. Mike DeWine's veto
- South Carolina GOP governor blasts labor unions while touting economic growth in annual address
Recommendation
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
Chipotle wants to hire 19,000 workers ahead of 'burrito season', adds new benefits
Full Virginia General Assembly signs off on SCC nominees, elects judges
AP PHOTOS: In Vietnam, vibrant Ho Chi Minh City is a magnet that pulls in millions
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Swedish PM says he’s willing to meet Hungary’s Orban to end deadlock over Sweden’s NATO membership
Inside Pregnant Giannina Gibelli and Blake Horstmann's Tropical Babymoon Getaway
Warriors honor beloved assistant coach Dejan Milojević before return to court