Since 1982, Patterson has maintained a residence, workspace, and gallery at 161 Essex Street in the Lower East Side.
Photography Patterson is known for his "Wall of Fame", in which he photographs people posing at his front door and later displays prints of them in the windows of his building. Says Patterson: The photos were later collected in "Clayton Patterson's Front Door Book" (2009, O.H.W.O.W. Press, Miami).
Tompkins Square Park police riot On August 6 and 7, 1988, police clashed with the young
anarchist squatter population in
Tompkins Square Park on the Lower East Side causing a massive riot. Patterson had initially gone out to video tape a performance at the
Pyramid Club, but noticed a lot of activity around the park as well as a sizable police presence. The restless, anarchistic, politically active, squatter population was gathering in protest over the newly enforced 1am curfew. When the riot broke out, Patterson began taping the incident in full detail. His footage from the night's events (some 3+ hours) became instrumental in exposing
police brutality and resulted in the indictment of six NYPD officers. As a result, New York District Attorney
Robert Morgenthau ordered Patterson to surrender his tapes and camera. Patterson refused the order and was sentenced to 90 days in jail. After a 10-day hunger strike, Patterson was ultimately released after turning over a copy of the video.
Clayton archive Patterson's collection of photography, video, art, press clippings, and books comprise a vast archive of Lower East Side history. The collection includes approximately half a million print photos, hundreds of thousands of digital photos, thousands of hours of video tape in multiple formats and numerous artworks by Patterson and Rensaa as well as other New York artists. The archive also consists of various
ephemera from the streets of New York City including brand stamped
glassine heroin bags, protest banners and fliers, graffiti stickers and art. In addition to the hours of Tompkins Square Park footage, the video archive contains a large number of interviews, concerts, and street protests (including the
ACT UP AIDS protest). Patterson's documentation of the NYC
hardcore punk scene of the 1980s and early 1990s includes footage of
Bad Brains,
Murphy's Law,
Sick of it All,
Reagan Youth,
Sheer Terror and
G.G. Allin. His videos interviews with artists
Richard Kern,
Nick Zedd,
Joe Coleman,
Annie Sprinkle,
H.R. Giger,
Kembra Pfahler (of the Voluptuous Horror of Karen Black),
Ira Cohen,
Pyramid Club dancers
Phoebe Legere, Dee Finley, folk historian and
ethnomusicologist Harry Smith and numerous tattoo artists, colorful characters and NYC community leaders comprise an extensive historical document of the city. ==
Captured==