The Kennedys: Portrait of a Family
An excerpt from the new book by Shannon Thomas Perich
- Smithsonian.com, October 26, 2007, Subscribe
On January 3, 1961, the weather was a breezy and comfortable 75 degrees along the stretch of beach at the Kennedy compound in Palm Beach, Florida.
Inside the rambling Mediterranean-style house at 1095 North Ocean Boulevard, Richard Avedon was setting up his portable portrait studio in the drafty living room, while Mr. Kenneth of New York styled Jacqueline Kennedy's hair, Rose Kennedy fretted over Caroline and John Jr.'s clothes, and aides took memos and relayed phone messages to president-elect John F. Kennedy.
Avedon, now at the height of his profession, had come to Palm Beach to create photo exclusives for Harper's Bazaar and LOOK magazines. The Kennedys: Portrait of a Family presents this unique set of images from the Smithsonian's collection and revisits the only known formal pre-inaugural photographs of the president-elect and his family to examine a fascinating intersection of photography, fashion, and history.
In January 1961, women still wore gloves as part of their daily attire and men regularly used dressing like Brylcreem™ in their hair. "The Twist," Chubby Checker's song and dance, was all the rage. The Berlin Wall did not yet exist. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones had not yet invaded America. Nearly a year earlier, the Greensboro Four had staged a sit-in at an all-white Woolworth's lunch counter in North Carolina, sparking a wave of similar sit-ins across the South. The Soviet missile that had shot down an American U-2 spy plane the previous spring had exacerbated the tension between the United States and Soviet Union. Television was barely twenty years old. Picture magazines like LOOK and Life were an important mainstream source of information and entertainment, and fashion magazines like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar were the most imaginative and technically advanced users of photography.
Avedon's photographs of the Kennedys for the February 28 issue of LOOK take their place among the many lively, energetic family pictures by the great Kennedy chroniclers. Stanley Tretick, Jacques Lowe, and Mark Shaw each had a unique perspective, creating culturally significant images within the photographic parameters established by the Kennedys. The photographs for the February 1961 issue of Harper's Bazaar, however, are starkly different—they were created within Avedon's parameters.
Richard Avedon was as much a leader in the development of American visual culture as he was a participant in it. He worked mostly for Harper's Bazaar, but also photographed for LOOK, Life, and a variety of advertising clients. In 1957, he was the creative consultant for Stanley Donen's movie Funny Face, which starred Audrey Hepburn and Fred Astaire. Astaire's character, Dick Avery, was modeled after Richard (Dick) Avedon, and many characters in the movie were based on his colleagues and editors at Harper's Bazaar. In 1958, Popular Photography named him one of the ten greatest photographers in the world.
Like Avedon, the Kennedys were leaders of and participants in American visual culture. In the 1920s, John F. Kennedy's father, Joseph Kennedy Sr., bought and sold Hollywood studios, produced films, and owned movie theaters. Much of the elder Kennedy's knowledge about the power of the visual image was effectively applied to his son's political career: many journalists and historians cite Kennedy's compelling performance during the first of the televised presidential campaign debates with Richard Nixon as a deciding factor of his electoral win. Joe Kennedy's close relationship with Henry Luce, editor in chief and principal stockholder of Time, Inc., kept John's and later Jackie's faces on the covers of Time and Life.
When Richard Avedon made these images between the presidential election and the inauguration, the Kennedys were well known through pictures and television and had established a style in which they preferred to be photographed. Jackie's importance as a fashion trendsetter was just beginning to take hold, and the Harper's Bazaar sitting provided a new arena in which the Kennedys could present themselves.
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Comments (1)
Wonderful page. Always one of my favorite pictures. With all due respect to the writer--the Kennedy home in PB was not a "compound," which means "more than one." There was only one house and it was referred to as the Kennedy estate in Palm Beach. The Kennedy compound, which the Kennedys never use that word, is in Hyannis, Massachusetts. Just an observation. I used to work for the Kennedys.
Posted by James Duncan on July 31,2008 | 03:08 PM