November 27, 2017 Conversation Starter Eileen Myles and Jeremy Sigler Go to an Exhibition By The Paris Review Jeremy Sigler and Eileen Myles at “(Re)Appropriations,” Tibor de Nagy Gallery. Photo: Andrew Arnot Not long ago, I found myself reading Jeremy Sigler’s 2009 interview with Eileen Myles in The Brooklyn Rail. The occasion was a new book by Myles, but the conversation opens with banter about clothing—“I’m pretty critical of the J. Crew catalogue, which I have to confess I love looking through”—as though the pair had met for a drink instead of an interview. And then, toward the end of their time together, Sigler mentions Larry Rivers’s famous nude portrait of Frank O’Hara: “I think this is my idealization of the poet,” he says; Myles calls it “collaborated outrageousness.” Earlier this fall, Tibor de Nagy Gallery opened a small survey of Rivers’s work, including the O’Hara painting—an opportunity, in other words, for Myles and Sigler to continue their conversation, wherever it may lead. (With gratitude to Andrew Arnot, owner of Tibor de Nagy Gallery.) —Nicole Rudick MYLES: I guess we maybe want to start with the famous one. SIGLER: Yeah. I’ve never seen this painting in person, actually. Have you? MYLES: I feel like I have, but that may or may not be true. SIGLER: I’ve seen the drawing that was on the cover of one of O’Hara’s books. MYLES: Right. SIGLER: Which Andrew said is missing—the drawing is actually gone, he said. MYLES: Who said? SIGLER: Andrew. MYLES: Really? SIGLER: Yeah. MYLES: Gone from where it was? Where was it? SIGLER: A collector who owned it said it was stolen. MYLES: From where? From their house? SIGLER: Yeah, something like that. But this is … this is really something else. MYLES: Yeah. I think it’s kind of a good painting. SIGLER: Yeah. I mean, look at that cinder block. MYLES: I know, I had the same feeling. The hair on his chest, too. And, of course, Frank’s dick. Read More