Portraits. One hundred eighty portraits by acclaimed photographer Richard Avedon - a vast collective portrait of America in the second half of the 20th century. Richard Avedon: Portraits will feature his most classic and penetrating images, documenting as never before this artist's dazzling reinvention of the genre of photographic portraiture.
Portraits
One hundred eighty portraits by
acclaimed photographer Richard
Avedon - a vast collective portrait of
America in the second half of the
20th century - will go on view at The
Metropolitan Museum of Art on
September 26. Richard Avedon:
Portraits will feature his most classic
and penetrating images, documenting
as never before this artist's dazzling
reinvention of the genre of photographic portraiture. The
exhibition, which will remain on view through January 5,
2003, will span Avedon's entire career, from his earliest
portraits made in the late 1940s through his most recent
work.
All of the photographs in the exhibition are courtesy of
Richard Avedon.
Philippe de Montebello, Director of The Metropolitan
Museum of Art commented: "Richard Avedon's work now
takes its proper place in the larger history of art,
representing the culmination of the time-honored tradition
of public portraiture. Much like the great 19th-century
French photographer, Nadar, whose telling portraits of rare
individuals captured the creative genius of his generation,
so Avedon, a century later, collected the key players and
directed them in a brilliant portrait of an era that was
questioning, unruly, and self-consciously alive, like all
periods of radical growth. We are honored to share this
estimable achievement with our audiences."
Among the highlights of Richard Avedon: Portraits will be
stunning portrayals of 20th-century artistic, intellectual,
and political figures including Marilyn Monroe, Truman
Capote, Charlie Chaplin, Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Duke
and Duchess of Windsor, Marian Anderson, Willem de
Kooning, and many others; a series of portraits of the
artist's father in the years just prior to his death; and
portraits of the unsung citizenry from the artist's series In
The American West. The exhibition will also feature
Avedon's mural-size group portraits of: Andy Warhol and
the members of the Factory (1969), the coterie of artists,
filmmakers, and performers who comprised the avant-garde
bohemia of the day; the Mission Council (1971), military
and political leaders who determined policy in regard to the
Vietnam War; and the Chicago Seven (1969), a group of
radicals accused of conspiring to incite a riot at the 1968
Democratic National Convention.
Maria Morris Hambourg, Curator in Charge of the
Metropolitan's Department of Photographs and the
organizer of the exhibition, noted, "By dint of progressive
challenges to himself, Richard Avedon has not only distilled
photographic portraiture to its irreducible core, but has
also produced an extended meditation on life, death, art,
and identity. Laureate of the invisible reflected in
physiognomy, Avedon has become our poet of portraiture."
Metropolitan Museum of Art Special Exhibition Galleries, The Tisch Galleries,
2nd floor
New York