The exhibition comprises sixty photographs, many not seen before in the UK, and which span the period from 1957 to 1971. One of the most original and influential photographers of the twentieth century, Arbus's subject matter is people; adolescent couples, young children, sophisticated socialites, circus performers, nudists, eccentrics and transvestites.
Timothy Taylor Gallery is delighted to present a major exhibition of works by
American photographer, Diane Arbus (1923 - 1971). The exhibition will comprise
sixty photographs, many not seen before in the UK, and which span the period from
1957 to 1971.
One of the most original and influential photographers of the twentieth century,
Arbus's subject matter is people; adolescent couples, young children, sophisticated
socialites, circus performers, nudists, eccentrics and transvestites. In each instance,
the subjects are simply documented, captured in their own context. As Arbus
emphasised, "...I don't like to arrange things. If I stand in front of something, instead
of arranging it, I arrange myself." The gaze is direct. The relationship between sitter
and photographer self-conscious and unique. Arbus is our witness. In ʻChild with a
toy hand grenade in Central Park, N.Y.C. 1962', a young, grimacing child confronts
the camera. His expression manic, his intention unclear, he is caught and preserved
in the moment. Arbus exposes the extraordinariness of the everyday.
As John
Szarkowski, organiser of the 1967 Museum of Modern Art exhibition New
Documents, emphasised, "The portraits of Diane Arbus show that all of us - the most
ordinary and the most exotic of us - are on closer scrutiny remarkable". This is
particularly evinced by, for example, ʻPuerto Rican woman with a beauty mark,
N.Y.C. 1965ʼ, a portrait striking in its unflinching honesty, or ʻTeenage couple on
Hudson Street, N.Y.C. 1963ʼ, where the pathos of the child emulating the grown-up
is inescapable.
The exhibition will also include a significant group of photographs from Arbus's
ʻUntitledʼ series. These photographs were taken at residences for people with
development disabilities in the last years of Arbus's life, between 1969 and 1971.
The atmosphere of these photographs is markedly different from Arbus's earlier
work. The residency patients are photographed outdoors singly and in groups, often
wearing fancy dress and masks for Halloween. The photographs are startling in their
emotional purity. As Doon Arbus, Diane Arbusʼs daughter, notes in her afterword to
the 1995 ʻUntitledʼ publication, in these works, Arbus "...may have found her most
transcendent and consistently romantic vision. These images - created out of the
courage to see things as they are, the grace to permit them simply to be, and a
deceptive simplicity that permits itself neither fancy nor artifice - shows us metaphors
embodied in the facts, riddles without words or answers, fragments of an unwritten
fairy tale."
Diane Arbus, born Diane Nemerov in New York City in 1923, started taking pictures
in the early 1940s and went on to study photography with Berenice Abbott, Alexey
Brodovitch and later Lisette Model. Her first published photographs appeared in
Esquire in 1960. In 1963 and 1966 she was awarded John Simon Guggenheim
Fellowships. In 1967, she was one of three photographers to be included in the
landmark exhibition, New Documents, at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. A
year after her death her work was selected for inclusion at the Venice Biennale - the
first work of an American photographer to be so honoured.
The Museum of Modern Art hosted a major retrospective that travelled through the
United States and Canada from 1972 to 1975 and, in 2003, the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art organised Revelations, a full-scale retrospective that then
toured to museums in the United States and Europe, including the Victoria & Albert
Museum, London, 2005-2006. From 9 May until 31 August 2009, the National
Museum Cardiff will present a show of Arbusʼs works as part of the Artist Rooms
collection created by Anthony dʼOffay and acquired by the nation in February 2008.
Opening 19 May 2009 6-8pm
Timothy Taylor Gallery
21 Dering Street - London
Open 10am - 6pm Monday - Friday; 10am - 2pm Saturday
Free admission