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Portraits from the Pyramid Clayton Patterson
“Lypsinka was a professional piano player. She played piano for the ballet when they practiced”Photography Clayton Patterson

Photos from the club that helped define NY’s 80s drag scene

Photographer Clayton Patterson shares archive images of the performers of the Pyramid Club – a favourite of RuPaul and Madonna

While the exclusivity of mega clubs like Studio 54 occupied New York nightlife in the late 70s-80s, an entire underground of struggling artists and drag queens created an inclusive club scene of their own. East Village’s notorious Pyramid Club, that opened in 1979, became home to this world and a hotspot for a new breed of politicised drag performers like RuPaul, John Kelly and Lypsinka.

“The Lower East Side was an expressionist place, where it was more about just being an artist than being rich or famous” – Clayton Patterson

Documentary photographer Clayton Patterson found inspiration in inventive drag performers and spent time capturing the faces of the Pyramid Club – permanently recording their history with a set of drag portraits where his lens illuminates the diverse drag archetypes that found a home within the club walls. “You just had this kind of spontaneous, unraveling creativity every weekend. The club was like a crystallisation of the Lower East Side,” he recalls. “Unlike SoHo – which was more of a careerist place for artists – the Lower East Side was an expressionist place, where it was more about just being an artist than being rich or famous.” This performative essence oozes through Patterson’s portraits as we meet over 15 drag queens at the height of their expression. Take John Kelly, an art performer who reincarnates the Mona Lisa, or drag queen Maze who takes drag inspiration from cartoons like Dracula.

Over 30 years, Patterson’s pioneering images of club kids, the LGBTQ communities, and the squatters of Tompkins Square Park permanently document the reality of pre-gentrification New York – immortalising the grit and glamour of the years that made New York so iconic. “In that period, (East Village) was one of the most racially integrated neighborhoods in the world: it had Chinese, Indians, Bangladeshis, blacks, Hispanics, Jews, as well as lifestyle diversity – the Hell’s Angels, skinheads, drag queens, religious zealots”, says Patterson. “And at the Pyramid Club, security would be people from the hardcore scene, which is supposedly very anti-gay, but all of these stereotypes didn’t apply there. It was like a free zone.”

Clayton Patterson's Portraits from the Pyramid will be on show at GROUPE, 198 Bowery NYC between October 18 2017- January 17 2018. You can find out more here

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