A Fresh Look at Diane Arbus
A new retrospective featuring an unprecedented number of the troubled photographer's images makes the case for her innovative artistry
- By Tessa DeCarlo
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2004, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Until recently, mystery surrounded many of the details of Arbus’ life and work. For decades, her estate refused to cooperate with any effort to write an Arbus biography and allowed the public to see only a tiny portion of her work. All this has changed with the new exhibition, which was developed with the cooperation of the estate and its administrator, Doon Arbus, the older of Arbus’ two daughters. The show includes not only Arbus’ most famous pictures but also early photographs and mature work never exhibited before. In addition, displays of her books, cameras, letters and working notebooks convey a powerful sense of the photographer’s personality—whimsical, brainy and endlessly curious.
“This is a new view of Arbus, through her own words,” says independent curator Elisabeth Sussman, who organized the retrospective with SFMOMA’s Phillips. “She was extremely smart and witty and incredibly perceptive, and the photographs are just a part of that.”
The exhibition catalog, Diane Arbus Revelations (Random House), offers not only the most complete selection of Arbus images ever put between covers but also a fascinating 104- page illustrated chronology of Arbus’ life, studded with excerpts from her letters and other writings. The chronology, put together by Sussman and Doon Arbus, is effectively the first authorized biography of the photographer and the first to be able to draw on her papers.
Arbus was born Diane Nemerov in 1923. Her mother, Gertrude, chose her daughter’s name, pronouncing it “Dee- Ann.” Talent was abundant in the Nemerov family, a wealthy New York clan that ran Russek’s, a fashionable Fifth Avenue department store. Diane’s older brother was Howard Nemerov, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who was named U.S. poet laureate in 1988. Her younger sister, Renée Sparkia, became a sculptor and designer. After retiring from Russek’s, their father, David Nemerov, launched a second, successful career as a painter.
Diane’s artistic and literary gifts were apparent early on. Her father encouraged her to become a painter, and she studied art in high school. At the age of 14 she fell in love with Allan Arbus, the 19-year-old nephew of one of her father’s business partners. Her parents disapproved of her infatuation, but the romance flourished in secret. Soon Diane lost interest in painting and in going to college, saying her only ambition was to become Allan’s wife. “I hated painting and I quit right after high school because I was continually told how terrific I was,” she said many years later. “I had the sense that if I was so terrific at it, it wasn’t worth doing.”
Diane and Allan were married as soon as she turned 18, in 1941, with the grudging acceptance of her family. The couple pursued a shared interest in photography, turning the bathroom of their Manhattan apartment into a part-time darkroom. David Nemerov gave them work shooting fashion photographs for Russek’s advertisements.
During World War II, Allan served as a military photographer. One of the earliest photographs in the “Revelations” show is a 1945 self-portrait Diane made for Allan while he was in the Army. Though pregnant with Doon, who would be born later that year, in the picture she is still slender, and very beautiful, with dark eyes and a wistful, otherworldly air.
After the war, the Arbuses’ career as commercial photographers took off, and soon they were working for top women’s magazines and advertising agencies. Usually Allan shot the pictures while Diane came up with clever ideas and props. Diane also took care of Doon and their second daughter, Amy, born in 1954. (Doon, now 59, became a writer, worked on several magazine projects with her mother and later published two books with photographer Richard Avedon. Amy followed in her mother’s footsteps and became a photographer.)
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Comments (8)
You may be interested in reading our review of Diane Arbus Tate exhibition in London, we thought her collection was fantastically displayed
http://www.maggiesemple.com/blog/2011/08/22/artist-rooms-diane-arbus/
Posted by Semple on August 22,2011 | 06:45 AM
What was the page number of the article when published?
Posted by Stephen on May 2,2011 | 11:07 PM
have a hard copy of her book any one interested in it
Posted by Ralph Ross on June 15,2010 | 04:44 PM
Are there any exhibitions of D. Arbus work in 2009?
Posted by Jayne Irby on June 22,2009 | 11:27 AM
Rebecca, Just google
Posted by Marshall Curson on February 4,2009 | 06:45 PM
Please supply photographs by Diane Arbus. Thank you.
Posted by Wendy on April 10,2008 | 02:43 AM
I am having difficulty finding photographs of Diane Arbus herself. Will you please direct me?
Posted by Rebecca on March 24,2008 | 10:57 PM
I am having difficulty finding photogragphs of Diane Arbus herself. Will you please direct me?
Posted by Rebecca on November 19,2007 | 11:37 AM