Photographer Diane Arbus saw a world that the masses try to avoid. With her portraits of middle-class couples, transvestites, children, carnival freaks, celebrities, nudists and more, she exploded ...
Diane Arbus was a daughter of privilege who spent much of her adult life documenting those on the periphery of society. Since she killed herself in 1971, her unblinking portraits have made her a ...
In 1958, in New York City, the upper class Diane Arbus is a frustrated and lonely woman with a conventional marriage with two daughters. Her husband is a photographer sponsored by the wealthy parents ...
Critics compared her unnerving images to those of Diane Arbus, but praised her ability to infuse her subjects with warmth and humanity. By Adam Nossiter How do you show 450 Arbus photos? In a maze of ...
Miranda Adama is a writer, variety streamer, and all-around creative who loves violence on screen and what it says about pop culture. She's the host of Be Seeing You: A John Wick Podcast and has been ...
Among the new films opening this week is “Fur,” director Steven Shainberg and writer Erin Cressida Wilson‘s provocative take on the life of famous photographer Diane Arbus. With the full title “Fur: ...
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." " Diane Arbus. Revelations, the groundbreaking 2003 retrospective of the work of Diane Arbus, was a peek inside the ...
The exhibition diane arbus: in the beginning gathers images the photographer shot between 1956 and 1962, when she started using the distinctive Rolleiflex camera with which she captured her most ...
It's called "Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus," but there's nothing imaginary about the film. It's real all right, and it stubbornly commands your attention for two boring hours. You stick in ...
If you think you are capable of living without writing,” said the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke, “do not write.” He didn’t live to meet Diane Arbus, but if he had seen her photographs he would have ...
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Radiant Rembrandts, vibrant portraiture of everyday life and uncanny photographs in New York and Boston, to catch before they’re gone, come August and September. By Rachel Sherman Critics compared her ...