Shifting Landscapes 

2024

Two figures in helmets share a kiss in front of tall, textured brick buildings with colorful reflections.

Narrator: Big Heat by Martin Wong is an acrylic on linen painting measuring about five feet tall by four feet wide. 

In Big Heat, a red brick tenement building from the Lower East Side is the backdrop for two firemen kissing in the foreground. The bottom of the tenement is engulfed in billows of scratchy red, brown, and gray paint: it looks like the building is rising from clouds of smoke. In front of the smoke, the two firemen wear uniforms of dark gray with silver hardware. The two men are nondescript, save for their warmly lit skin and their dark hair. The tone of the men kissing amplifies the drama of the smoky building scene behind them; the tender expression of romance and passion in their embrace contrasts with the monumentality of the looming building. 

The facade of the tenement building behind the figures is stickered with flaking panels of pastel paint - perhaps graffiti, or painted-on ads. Martin Wong rendered the bricks of the tenement with thick globs of acrylic paint, which add to the building’s grounded and weighty feeling. 

Wong was an avid supporter of graffiti art, which is perhaps underscored by a brown brick-painted frame around the edge of the canvas that has sprays of fluorescent green on it.The artist made this painting look as if the firefighters and building were actually painted on quasi-realistic brick, like the scene itself was created on  the face of a building. The “realism” of the painting is queered, not only by the scene of desire in the foreground, but also by this trick of the eye. 

Andrew Castrucci, a friend of the artist, spoke about Big Heat.

Andrew Castrucci: “The tenements were beautiful to Martin, no matter how empty it was or, or so forth. It was like a Roman ruin or a Greek ruin or an Egyptian ruin, the pyramids… Artists are constantly redefining what beauty is. So I think this is just another perspective of redefining beauty—the kissing firemen. It certainly celebrates gay life, but it's also, I think, more abstract than that. It's just about human contacts, somehow. I mean it's part of the nature of the city is this beautiful chaos, somehow even though it’s very calm and still.”


Martin Wong, Big Heat, 1986. Acrylic on linen, 60 1/8 × 48 1/8 in. (152.7 × 122.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee 99.89. Courtesy of the Martin Wong Foundation and P·P·O·W, New York

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