Twelfth printing. Pictorial wraps. Edited by Doon Arbus and Marvin Israel.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Everything that needs to be said has already been said about this book, this record, this heartache, this brave account, this body of evidence Arbus is able to tell us how much we want and how much we will have and will not have, she manage it in the pages of one monograph. Laurel Nakadate, "The Photobook Review"
An unflinching poetry inhabits the pages of the recently published "Diane Arbus: An Aperture Monograph: Fortieth-Anniversary Edition," a reissue of the volume that accompanied her posthumous 1972 MoMA retrospective. "Art Critical"
What strikes me as I leaf through this book is Arbus s convincing sensibility of the world, and how thoroughly her subjects inhabit it. "Art Critical"
There is nothing clinical or exploitative about her motivations and she talks about being more interested in her interactions than in the final images that resulted from them. "Hyperallergic"
Photographs are souvenirs, a stand-in for what we experienced and wish to remember, and Arbus images are amazing relics. "Hyperallergic" "
Diane Arbus was not a theorist but an artist. Her concern was not to buttress philosophical positions but to make pictures. She loved photography for the miracles it performs every day by accident, and respected it for the precise intentional tool that it could be, given talent, intelligence, dedication and discipline. Her pictures are concerned with private rather than social realities, with psychological rather than visual coherence, with the prototypical and mythic rather than the topical and temporal. Her real subject is no less than the unique interior lives of those she photographed. John Szarkowski, 1972, Director, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art
Those portraits of sideshow performers and weeping children, her matter-of-fact nudists and naked transvestites, her pictures of "them," her pictures of "us" something of consequence is at stake here, and it's not just art. Arbus worked at the point where the voyeuristic and the sacramental converge. She lies in wait for your first misstep in her direction. Then she dares you to stare at something a little boy with a toy hand grenade, a dominatrix embracing her client until you admit your own complicity with whatever it is in there that frightens you. At that point, all the picture's traps unfold, and it confers its rough grace. Richard Lacayo, "Time"
Confronting a major photograph by Arbus, you lose your ability to know or distinctly to think or feel, and certainly to judge anything. She turned picture-making inside out. She didn t gaze at her subjects; she induced them to gaze at her. Selected for their powers of strangeness and confidence, they burst through the camera lens with a presence so intense that whatever attitude she or you or anyone might take toward them disintegrates You may feel, crazily, that you have never really seen a photograph before. Peter Schjeldahl "The New Yorker" "
Diane Arbus was not a theorist but an artist. Her concern was not to buttress philosophical positions but to make pictures. She loved photography for the miracles it performs every day by accident, and respected it for the precise intentional tool that it could be, given talent, intelligence, dedication and discipline. Her pictures are concerned with private rather than social realities, with psychological rather than visual coherence, with the prototypical and mythic rather than the topical and temporal. Her real subject is no less than the unique interior lives of those she photographed. John Szarkowski, 1972, Director, Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art
Those portraits of sideshow performers and weeping children, her matter-of-fact nudists and naked transvestites, her pictures of "them," her pictures of "us" something of consequence is at stake here, and it's not just art. Arbus worked at the point where the voyeuristic and the sacramental converge. She lies in wait for your first misstep in her direction. Then she dares you to stare at something a little boy with a toy hand grenade, a dominatrix embracing her client until you admit your own complicity with whatever it is in there that frightens you. At that point, all the picture's traps unfold, and it confers its rough grace. Richard Lacayo, Time
Confronting a major photograph by Arbus, you lose your ability to know or distinctly to think or feel, and certainly to judge anything. She turned picture-making inside out. She didn t gaze at her subjects; she induced them to gaze at her. Selected for their powers of strangeness and confidence, they burst through the camera lens with a presence so intense that whatever attitude she or you or anyone might take toward them disintegrates You may feel, crazily, that you have never really seen a photograph before. Peter Schjeldahl The New Yorker"
Diane Arbus--born Diane Nemerov in New York City in 1923--married Allan Arbus at the age of eighteen. She started taking pictures in the early 1940's and studied photography with Berenice Abbott in the late 1940's and with Alexey Brodovitch in the mid 1950's. It was Lisette Model's photographic workshops, however, that inspired her, around 1957, to begin seriously pursuing the work for which she has come to be known.
Her first published photographs appeared in Esquire in 1960. During the next decade, working for Esquire, Harper's Bazaar, and other major magazines, she published more than a hundred pictures, including portraits and photographic essays, many of which originated as personal projects, occasionally accompanied by her own writing. Diane Arbus: Magazine Work (Aperture, 1984) documents this aspect of her career and its relationship to her best-known imagery.
In 1963 and 1966 she was awarded Guggenheim Fellowships for her project on "American Rites, Manners, and Customs." She traveled across the country, photographing the people, places, and events she described as "the considerable ceremonies of our present These are our symptoms and our monuments," she wrote. "I want simply to save them, for what is ceremonious and curious and commonplace will be legendary."
A selected group of these photographs attracted a great deal of critical and popular attention when they were featured, along wit the work of two other photographers, in the Museum of Modern Art's 1967 exhibition "New Documents." The boldness of her subject matter and photographic approach were recognized as revolutionary.
In the late 1960's, Arbus taught photography at Parsons School of Design, the Rhode Island School of Design, and Cooper Union, and continued to make photographs. Notable among her late works is a series of photographs she took at residences for the mentally retarded. Untitled (Aperture, 1995) is a collection of fifty-one of these photographs. "The extraordinary power of Untitled confirms our earliest impression of Arbus's work," wrote Hilton Als in the New Yorker. "It is as iconographic as it gets in any medium. These pictures are purely ecstatic."
In 1970, Arbus made a portfolio of ten prints, which was intended to be the first in a series of limited editions of her work. She committed suicide in July of 1971. In the years following her death and the Museum of Modern Art's posthumous retrospective--which was seen by more than a quarter of a million people before it began its three-year tour of the United States and Canada--exhibitions devoted exclusively to her work have been mounted throughout Western Europe, Asia, Australia, and New Zealand. To this day critics continue to debate the meaning of her photographs and the intentions behind them. Their indelible imprint on our visual experience has long been established beyond dispute.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Condition: acceptable. Ausreichend/Acceptable: Exemplar mit vollständigem Text und sämtlichen Abbildungen oder Karten. Schmutztitel oder Vorsatz können fehlen. Einband bzw. Schutzumschlag weisen unter Umständen starke Gebrauchsspuren auf. / Describes a book or dust jacket that has the complete text pages (including those with maps or plates) but may lack endpapers, half-title, etc. (which must be noted). Binding, dust jacket (if any), etc may also be worn. Seller Inventory # M0091233441X-B
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Soft cover. Condition: Fair. 1st Edition. Considerable outer wear with bent and torn edges, otherwise pages remain relatively intact. Seller Inventory # ABE-1750109157542
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Eighth Printing. 15 Text- und 83 Tafelseiten, Fotoband mit 83 großformatigen s/w Fotos, die nicht nur von der Schönheit des Menschengeschlechts künden. Text in englischer Sprache. Einbanddeckel gebräunt und vorn hochgebogen, sonst ordentliches und sauberes Exemplar Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 793 Original-Broschur, 23x28cm, Zustand: 3. Seller Inventory # 60027
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Condition: Very Good. Item in very good condition! Textbooks may not include supplemental items i.e. CDs, access codes etc. Seller Inventory # 00089601254
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Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: NoNE. MS. ARBUS' PHOTOS (illustrator). 12TH PRINTING. A SELECTION OF MS. ARBUS' FINEST WORK BEAUTIFUL BUT STARK HUMAN PORTRAITS SOLID CLEAN AND BRIGHT ONE INCH CHIP AT BOTTOM OF SPINE OTHERWISE A VERY NICE COPY. Seller Inventory # 004783
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Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. Size: 4to - over 9¾ - 12" tall. Book. Seller Inventory # 506425
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Softcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dust Jacket. Eleventh Printing. nb and w photos; 8vo 8" - 9" tall; 184 pages. Seller Inventory # 15470
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Soft cover. Condition: Good. Front cover has creases at the corners and a chip on the top edge. Othewiese, very good all over with no marks, stains or writing. All photos are perfect. Seller Inventory # 000217
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Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. Original large paperback, 11th printing, b + w plates throughout. One of the important monographs. Older edition, book is solid and bright. There is some light wear, rubbing and curling to edges and corners; light soiling to white covers. Ordinary reference wear. Due to age of book, I would consider spine fragile. Seller Inventory # ABE-1750208606010
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