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 4 of 6)
The pictures, however, did not have the distinctive sharp-focus look we generally associate with Arbus. In the 1950s and early ’60s, she was using a 35-millimeter camera and natural lighting, and her work from that period showed the influence of Model, Robert Frank and other practitioners of street photography. Like them, she favored blurred surfaces and grainy textures, a long way from the tidy look of mainstream commercial photographs.
Then, sometime around 1962 she switched to a 2 1/4 format camera, which allowed her to create sharper images with brilliant detail. Describing this shift years later, she recalled that she had grown tired of grainy textures and wanted “to see the difference between flesh and material, the densities of different kinds of things: air and water and shiny.” She added, “I began to get terribly hyped on clarity.”
Nor was this shift merely a matter of camera size or lighting choices (she later added a strobe flash). More and more, Arbus made her intense relationship with the people she photographed the subject of her work—her curiosity about the details of their lives, their willingness to share their secrets and the thrilling discomfort she felt during these encounters. “She could hypnotize people, I swear,” fellow photographer Joel Meyerowitz is quoted as saying in Patricia Bosworth’s 1984 unauthorized biography of Arbus. “She would start talking to them and they would be as fascinated with her as she was with them.” This sense of mutuality is one of the most striking and original things about Arbus’ photographs, giving them a lucidity and focus that are as much psychological as photographic.
A reader of Freud, Nietzsche and James Frazer’s treatise on religion and mythology, The Golden Bough, Arbus saw the circus performers, eccentrics, midgets and transvestites she photographed both as fascinating real-life personages and as mythic figures. Through them she found her way to still more people and places, far from her own background. “I have learned to get past the door, from the outside to the inside,” she wrote in a 1965 fellowship application. “One milieu leads to another. I want to be able to follow.”
Her intelligence and elfin beauty proved valuable assets. And her excited appreciation of whoever struck her as extraordinary allowed her to gain entree to a female impersonator’s boudoir, a dwarf ’s hotel room and countless other places that would have been closed to a less persistent, less appealing photographer. Once she obtained permission to take pictures, she might spend hours, even days shooting her subjects again and again and again.
Her subjects often became collaborators in the process of creation, sometimes over many years. For example, the Mexican dwarf she photographed in a hotel room in 1960 was still appearing in her photographs ten years later. And she first photographed Eddie Carmel, whom she called the Jewish giant, with his parents in 1960, ten years before she at last captured the portrait she had been seeking.
When Arbus went to San Francisco in 1967, photographer Edmund Shea introduced her to some “hippie chicks” who were working as topless dancers. He was not surprised that Arbus was able to convince them to pose for her. “Some people like to think of her as cynical. That’s a total misconception,” he says. “She was very emotionally open. She was very intense and direct, and people related to that.” Arbus herself had mixed feelings about her ability to draw out her subjects. “Kind of two-faced” is how she once described herself: “I hear myself saying, ‘How terrific.’ . . . I don’t mean I wish I looked like that. I don’t mean I wish my children looked like that. I don’t mean in my private life I want to kiss you. But I mean that’s amazingly, undeniably something.”
For several years Arbus’ distinctive photographs proved popular with magazine editors. Following that first Esquire photo essay, she published more than 250 pictures in Harper’s Bazaar, the Sunday Times Magazine of London and more than a dozen other magazines, and generated hundreds of additional pictures that were assigned but went unpublished. She also did a small number of private commissions, one of which forms the basis of a smaller Arbus exhibition that is also traveling the country this year and next. Titled “Diane Arbus: Family Albums,” the show originated at the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum in Massachusetts and presents some of Arbus’ magazine portraits of celebrities along with the complete contact sheets from a newly discovered photo session with a Manhattan family. The show’s run includes stops in Maine, Oregon and Kansas.
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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