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Sunday, August 3, 2014
Thursday, July 3, 2014
The Enigmatic Vivian Maier
Street photographer; sometimes nanny, Vivian Maier is still not a house-hold name. She remains largely, someone reclusive and unknown to this day. This is changing. Describing herself as a spy and leading a life of secrecy, often entered into shadowy places of full sunlight, discovering and uncovering many stories of the unseen or at least the unnoticed with her camera.
Maier was brilliant in her efforts, the truest and purest artist in the noblest sense. She remained largely among the unknown and unsung. Maier’s work; just short of genius or surpassing genius depending on the viewer’s interpretation is certainly among the most alluring creators the world of photography is yet to know. The Maier self-portraits are in a league with Cindy Sherman’s; her cunning portraits of children surely equaling those of Sally Mann. And we are still in the process of her discovery.
While Maier worked as a nanny she was considered something
of a “Mary Poppins” to her children.
They adored her and loved the numerous outings and adventures around New
York and Chicago. Vivian always carried her camera and amassed something better
than 100,000 images; many that she never printed or even developed. Her camera
of choice was a Rolleiflex twin lens reflex that evidence shows she began to
use after seeing a documentary on great French Photographers of the early 20th
Century at MoMA.
Maier recorded her imagery with precision, grace and care.
Her photographs are incredibly and generously democratic. Men, women, children,
every national origin and station of life depicted honestly with skill, nuance
and subtle beauty. For reasons all her own Maier never sought fame or to be
paid as a professional. She possesses all the qualities of the great and professional
as the work itself most eloquently speaks. Her anonymity remained intact
throughout her life. There are creative comparisons to be made to the painter
Vincent Van Gogh in their continued devotion to life, art and the expressions
of the human spirit. Vincent however did seek and want to support himself
financially at least to some degree as is evident in his letters to his
brother, Theo. Nothing at this point has surfaced on Maier to suggest she
sought either wealth or fame. We are honestly just beginning to write the book
of Vivian Maier and may find something to the contrary. Her life remains firmly
open ended and without any true definition. When all is said it is really about
the work and the process. Maier loved photography, the doing of the thing and
her subjects as the sheer volume and quality of her results illustrate.
Life, death, legacy and purpose were things considered by
Maier. At one point Vivian Maier
reflected on an audio tape in this way:
"Well I suppose nothing is meant to last forever. We have to make room for other people. It’s a wheel; you get on, you have to go in the end and then somebody has the same opportunity to go on to the end…and so on and somebody else takes their place.”
Vivian Maier
Miss Maier; as is said she liked to be addressed, made a
mark on her time and her world. This literally as she saw, experienced and
recorded it. She walked the streets of the city along with her children in tow,
in search of mystery, adventure and treasures. What was once their secret is
now ours to share, to study, to enjoy, proclaiming with raucous exuberance and
“right out loud!”
Sunday, June 15, 2014
John Lennon Drawings (at auction)
As the song and legend goes…It was twenty years ago today
that Sargent Pepper taught the band (The Beatles) to play. It was just prior to
that he (or someone) taught the band’s leader John Lennon to draw and to write.
He did it all with an impeccable style and humor. The ability to see the drama
and pains of life while recognizing the element of humor was always a part of
Lennon’s life and work. He expressed it beginning in his child-hood and it
sustained him as it did his career and prodigious creativity.
Lennon is universally known for his achievements in music both as a collaborator and soloist. His drawing and writings are to be noted as well. Sotheby’s just days ago sold eighty nine lots exclusively of Lennon’s manuscripts and drawings. The manuscripts: “In His Own Write” and “A Spaniard in the Works” were the center pieces. The books were published at the height of The Beatle’s popularity and the song “Paper Back Writer” was another humorous reflection of Lennon’s writings and life at that time. Like the best artists Lennon’s works were inspired by his own experiences.
The drawings were illustrations, random cartoons and whimsical musings largely done for himself, family and friends. Lennon’s drawings are on a par with other of the most popular cartoonists and illustrators of his time. Jules Feiffer, Ralph Steadman and Shel Silverstein all come to mind when looking at Lennon the cartoonist/illustrator. Lennon’s work stands up with the greats of the field.
Another of Lennon’s seminal works was the song “Nowhere Man.” He reflected on the writing of it:
“I was just sitting,
trying to think of a song and I thought of myself sitting there, doing nothing
and getting nowhere. Once I thought of that it was easy. It all came out. No, I
remember now. I’d actually stopped trying to think of something. Nothing would
come. I was cheesed off and went for a lie down, having given up. Then I
thought of myself as Nowhere Man-sitting in his nowhere land”
John
Lennon
In the animated film “Yellow Submarine” the Nowhere Man is a
curiously drawn, genius of sorts. He is a master of philosophy, the sciences
and the arts. The self-absorbed creature paints on canvas as he calculates
complex mathematical problems. He even reviews his own novel as he writes the
foot-notes with his own foot; no less. The Nowhere Man inhabits a blank world surrounded
by nothingness and no other beings. The life of the creative individual can
metaphorically be much like that. Lennon’s song is telling. His wit and honesty;
a constant, his true genius, undenied in everything he attempted and in all he achieved.
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