"Body Language is an absorbing book for those who take photography and queer representation seriously."
— The Gay & Lesbian Review
"In a sense a gift image itself, Body Language provides a fascinating, deeply researched background for the enigmatic works these queer artists left behind, helping to illuminate their contributions for generations to come."
— Aperture
"Mauss and Miller’s two essays live up to the controlled, evocative complexity of these images. As they each brush up against each others’ ideas, the conversation between their essays reproduces the intersubjective enmeshment of these artists, their lives, and their works. In their shared resonances, the essays feel like objects circulating between the writers and ourselves the readers, for us to touch and read and share, as in the haptic experience of paging through a scrapbook assembled by friends. The metaphorical touching of these essays offers a method for bringing these artists out of history, for helping us to see, to imagine, almost to touch, a new forest to live in."
— The Brooklyn Rail
"Body Language retrieves a visual archive of desire from the 1930s and 1940s that exceeds any simple binary of gay/straight, male/female, or individual/collective. Photographs by George Platt Lynes and PaJaMa encompass lavish pleasures and possibilities that can only be understood as 'queer'—as beautifully non-normative and knowingly performative. Nick Mauss and Angela Miller dedicate their book to a 'future history of art.' One can only hope that an art history of the future learns to be as loving and attentive to the queer visual past as Mauss and Miller. If it does, Body Language will be part of the reason why."—Richard Meyer, author of Master of the Two Left Feet: Morris Hirshfield Rediscovered
"This is an important work of new scholarship focused on the interwoven relationships and collaborative lives and works of George Platt Lynes and PaJaMa. Collaboration and coauthoring strategies have become even more central to many contemporary practices in staged photography, and so as we contend with both the precedents and limitations of generations past, Body Language provides a crucial historic reference point for a new, expansive world built by queer image-makers."—Paul Mpagi Sepuya, artist
"With their attentive readings that span photographs, intimate relationships, and archival materials, Mauss and Miller furnish fresh understandings of mid-twentieth-century collective artistic practices. Together they brilliantly chart the course for a new, collaborative, and queer art history—one that is as delightful as it is rigorous."—Julia Bryan-Wilson, author of Louise Nevelson's Sculpture: Drag, Color, Join, Face
"Fire Island—this thin strip of sand, thirty-two miles long, off the coast of Long Island—has been a place of play and a sanctuary for the queer community for decades. PaJaMa's and George Platt Lynes's pioneering photographic work captured the unique spirit of this place. This volume underlines the importance of safe spaces for the queer community to be free to express their identities and create shared experiences of intimacy."—Wolfgang Tillmans, artist
"This blazingly intelligent examination of photographer George Platt Lynes and the trio of painters whose complex collaborations through photography and queer performance were attributed to PaJaMa is filled with telling details and brings us new considerations of how these artists challenged older ideas of cisgender authorship, hierarchies, and identities. Read this volume and marvel at the wealth of interfiliated pathways in interpreting creative practices as forms of queer world-making."—Roxana Marcoci, David Dechman Senior Curator and Acting Chief Curator of Photography, Museum of Modern Art