Early work In 1977, he self-published two mini-comix and produced a portfolio of ten graphite on paper drawings (
The Joe Coleman Portfolio) that with its depictions of outsiders, freak shows and both historical and present day tableau, showing life in all its raw, unfiltered, gory detail, set the tone, style and subject matter of his later work. His first professionally published work appeared in issues of
Bizarre Sex and
Dope Comix, two underground comics titles published by
Kitchen Sink Press. He attended the
School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York for two years. While at SVA he started performing with punk band The Steel Tips, who were immortalized in an early 1979 painting, styled as a sideshow banner. The Steel Tips played at
CBGB, as well as in strip clubs, a prison, an insane asylum, and a benefit for female alcoholics held in a church. In 1982, Coleman self-published a full-length comic book,
The Mystery of Wolverine Woo-Bait.
Paintings Taken as a whole, Joe Coleman's body of paintings presents an ongoing exegesis of his life, influences, obsessions, family and friends with a particular focus on the pathological and the psychological, the sacred and the profane, pop culture and high art, and the inter-relations between them. He has painted portraits of a broad range of figures, both historical and contemporary, that include saints and sinners, writers (
Edgar Allan Poe,
Hunter S. Thompson,
Louis-Ferdinand Celine,
Jack Black), artists (
George Grosz,
Adolf Wolfli,
Henry Darger), madmen (
Charles Manson), actors (
Buster Keaton,
Leo Gorcey,
Jayne Mansfield), murderers (
Ed Gein,
Mary Bell,
Albert Fish,
Carl Panzram), musicians (
Hasil Adkins,
Hank Williams,
Captain Beefheart,
King Khan), visionaries (
Harry Houdini), freaks (
Johnny Eck,
Joseph Merrick a.k.a. the Elephant Man). He has also painted portraits of obscure or controversial figures in American history (
Boston Corbett; abolitionist
John Brown;
Swift Runner, a Cree Indian in the thrall of
Wendigo psychosis). Over the years, he has also painted portraits of many of his closest friends, including tattoo artist, writer, and painter
Jonathan Shaw, and motorcycle builder and stunt rider
Indian Larry. He has also produced many self-portraits and numerous portraits of his wife and muse Whitney Ward. The portrait paintings in particular are the fruit of Coleman's voluminous research into his subjects, which he has often compared to an archeological dig to excavate their true nature. The portraits take the form of a large central figure surrounded by depictions of episodes in the lives of his subjects that contributed to the development of their pathology, and influenced the drives and motivations that determine the course of their lives.
Exhibitions The first exhibitions of Coleman's paintings were held at Lower East Side and Soho art galleries,
Wooster,
Chronocide,
Limbo and
Civilian Warfare, in 1986 and 1987. Chronocide's Bob Behrens would become Coleman's first dealer.
Victoria and Albert Museum curator David Owsley, whom Coleman had met after picking him up his cab, bought a piece from one of his shows at Chronicide and hung it next to a Breughel in his collection. Owsley would also introduce Coleman to Mickey Cartin, who became the biggest collector of his work and convinced him to stop driving a cab and devote himself to painting full-time. In the late ’80s and early ‘90s, Coleman had solo shows at Psychedelic Solution in
Greenwich Village and Billy Shire's gallery,
La Luz de Jesus, on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. His first European show was held in 1998 at London's
The Horse Hospital, formerly a Victorian-era stable to house the sick horses of cab drivers. In 2006, Coleman had a mid-career retrospective at New York's
Jack Tilton Gallery entitled
Joe Coleman: 30 Paintings and a Selection from the Odditorium, curated by Steven Holmes. Among those who saw it were French journalist Clement Dirie who arranged for the show to travel to the
Palais de Tokyo in Paris, in March 2007, and German curator
Susanne Pfeffer, who invited Coleman to exhibit at the
K-W Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin and commissioned
David Woodard to pen an essay for the accompanying catalog. For the K-W Institute show, now entitled
Joe Coleman: Internal Digging, Pfeffer expanded the exhibit, to include all aspects of Coleman's work, as a painter, performance artist and also as a curator of the Odditorium, his personal museum. Taking over all four floors of the K-W Institute, visitors entered the show by walking into a cavernous ground floor space occupied by the sights and sounds of the Odditorium, largely housed in three German circus wagons. Each subsequent floor featured a different aspect of Coleman's oeuvre. Musician, actor, and outsider artist
Bruno S., the star of
Werner Herzog's
Stroszek, was personally invited by Coleman to play the dinner following the exhibition's public vernissage. The K-W Institute show is the largest and most comprehensive exhibition to date of Coleman's work. Two years later, in 2010, Dickinson put on a solo show by Joe Coleman,
Autoportrait, that included the first public viewing of
Doorway To Joe, a life-size self-portrait Coleman had painted over the course of four years.
Doorway to Joe was exhibited again, with its companion painting
Doorway to Whitney, a life-size portrait of Whitney Ward, completed in 2015, and unveiled at Unrealism, a show of figurative art curated by
Jeffrey Deitch and
Larry Gagosian at Art Basel Miami in December 2015. The two paintings also formed the center-piece of another large retrospective of Coleman's work, entitled
Doorway to Joe, held in 2017 at the Begovitch Gallery,
California State University, Fullerton. == Performance art ==