Everything2
Near Matches
Ignore Exact
Full Text
Everything2

Diane Arbus

created by nocodeforparanoia

(person) by nocodeforparanoia (6.2 hr) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 2 C!s Tue Oct 17 2000 at 0:34:39

Diane Arbus was a photographer whose prolific work in the mid-60's concentrated largely on "freaks" and the faces of many people, both in New York and Hollywood. Some of these freaks were truly misformed people, some were participants in the "punk" scene, which was truly new at the time, and some were celebreties.

Several other works concentrated on what is not seen in the image, rather than what is in the image, namely: people. Several of these photos, including A house on a hill, Hollywood, Cal. 1963, and A castle in Disneyland, Cal. 1962 concentrate on images that are exciting and "magical" largely because of the people who are there. When seen at night after all the visiters have gone home, Disney Castle is ominous and almost frightening; it is lonely and empty at best.

Arbus once said, "Lately I've been struck with how I really love what you can't see in a photograph. An Actual physical darkness. And it's very thrilling for me to see darkness again."

What she meant by "darkness" was something both "technical" and physical. Something paradoxical- the thrill of "seeing" invisibility, or at least envisioning it, the love of seeing what you can't see. Many of her photos are full of dark grays that are nearly indistinguishable, that point at which photographs stop letting the details come into sight.

Her work is fascinating. Check it out.


Source:Diane Arbus, an essay by Carol Armstrong


(person) by Mandella (2.1 y) (print)   ?   (I like it!) 1 C! Fri Oct 11 2002 at 6:17:21

Diane Arbus was born Diane Nemerov in New York City on March 14, 1923. The Arbus family lived in Central Park West, supported by her father, who owned a department store on 5th Avenue (Wolf). Even from the beginning, Arbus was destined to go "against the grain." When she was 14 she met Allan Arbus, whom she married four years later against her parents' wishes (Ironman).

Allan began teaching Diane about photography shortly after they were married. During WWII, he was trained at the Signal Corps photography school at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. After the war, Diane and Allan worked together as photographers in the fashion industry. Diane's work was noted with high regard as being innovative and artistic, different ideas for a fashion photographer (Ironman).

In 1957, she began to work independently of her husband, and as their professional relationship began to teeter, so did their marriage. They separated in 1959. This was an important year for Arbus, for also in `59 she began to study photography with Lisette Model. She then broke away from fashion photography to pursue new subject matter, including transvestites and patients of asylums -- those whom society calls "freaks" (Ironman).

"Freaks was a thing I photographed a lot. It was one of the first things I photographed and it had a terrific kind of excitement for me. I just used to adore them. I still do adore some of them. I don't quite mean they're my best friends but they made me feel a mixture of shame and awe. There's a quality of legend about freaks. Like a person in a fairy tale who stops you and demands that you answer a riddle. Most people go through life dreading they'll have a traumatic experience. Freaks were born with their trauma. They've already passed their test in life. They're aristocrats ." (Diane Arbus)

In 1963, Arbus received the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship, and the following year held her first exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art. Two years later, in 1966, she once again was honored with the Guggenheim Fellowship, and her work appeared in the 1967 "New Documents" photography show at the Museum of Modern Art. After that exhibit, she began teaching at the Parsons School of Design in New York and Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. In 1969, she divorced Allan Arbus (Ironman).

Perhaps instead of dreading her own trauma, Arbus was waiting for it. In July of 1971, she took her own life by overdosing on barbiturates and slitting her wrists. In 1972, posthumously, she was the first American photographer to be exhibited at the Venice Biennale. In 1984, Diane Arbus: Magazine Work was published (Ironman).

She is survived by her daughter, Doone Arbus.




References Cited

Arbus, Diane. Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph. New York, NY: Aperture Foundation, Inc. 1972.

Bosworth, Patricia. Diane Arbus: A Biography. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 1984.

Ironman, Sara. The Photography of Diane Arbus: Biography. http://www.temple.edu/photo/photographers/arbus/arbusbio.html

Diane Arbus: Magazine Work. New York, NY: Aperture Foundation, Inc. 1984.

Wolf, Matt. Diane Arbus: Background. http://www.concentric.net/~mpwolf/dianearbus/background


printable version
chaos

Cindy Sherman Berenice Abbott Joel Peter Witkin Freaks
Disneyland Robert Mapplethorpe Flower girl at a wedding Edward Weston
photograph The Carol Burnett Show Guggenheim fellowship photography
Wahhabi Milla Jovovich Roland Barthes Man Ray
Alfred Stieglitz thrilling Allan Arbus Anderson Cooper
Aperture Casualties MW pillock
Y'know, if you log in, you can write something here, or contact authors directly on the site. Create a New User if you don't already have an account.
  Epicenter
Login
Password

password reminder
register

Everything2 Help


cooled by Simulacron3

Cool Staff Picks
Nodes to live by:
Middle English
Bourbon
The evolutionary purpose of human body hair
E2SENCE: The Magazine of E2
Do not attempt to stop chain with your hands or genitals
Nuclear, chemical and genetic: Three different flavors
The Old Man and the Sea
Cats make great alarm clocks
All the gold you can eat
Nodespotting
New York, Westchester & Boston
What is punk rock? What is the blues?
eternal recurrence
New Writeups
argv
Astral Plane(idea)
Madara
One Winged Angel(fiction)
Tom Rook
Talk is cheap(poetry)
shaogo
Adelle Davis(person)
Aerobe
race car g sfjsgsd(poetry)
Binah
Dream Log: July 5, 2008(dream)
StrawberryFrog
Forgotten things in space(idea)
antigravpussy
velvet revolution fairy tale(idea)
Heitah
Nerve agent VX(thing)
Pavlovna
shite(idea)
wonton
Days and nights come together in a slow falling down(fiction)
Pavlovna
wee(idea)
katherine
root log: July 2008(log)
Madara
There’s nothing like a trail of blood to find your way back home(fiction)
Heitah
After sneeze(idea)
This affordable entertainment brought to you by The Everything Development Company