Thursday, 24 March 2011
Photographer Annie Leibovitz
Born Anna-Lou Leibovitz, on October 2, 1949, in Westbury, Connecticut. She was one of the six children born to Sam, an Air Force lieutenant, and Marilyn Leibovitz, a modern dance instructor. In 1967, Leibovitz enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute, where (although initially studying painting) she developed a love for photography.
After living briefly on an Israeli kibbutz, Leibovitz returned to the U.S., in 1970, and applied for a job with the start-up rock music magazine Rolling Stone. Impressed with Leibovitz’s portfolio, editor Jann Wenner offered her a job as a staff photographer. Within two years, the 23-year-old Leibovitz was promoted to chief photographer—a title she would hold for the next 10 years. Her position with the magazine afforded her the opportunity to accompany the Rolling Stones band on their 1975 international tour.
While with Rolling Stone, Leibovitz developed her trademark technique, which involved the use of bold primary colors and surprising poses. Wenner has credited her with making many Rolling Stone covers collector's items, most notably an issue that featured a nude John Lennon curled around his fully clothed wife, Yoko Ono. Taken on December 8, 1980, Leibovitz’s photo of the former Beatle was shot just hours before his death.
In 1983, Leibovitz left Rolling Stone and began working for the entertainment magazine Vanity Fair. With a wider array of subjects, Leibovitz’s photographs for Vanity Fair ranged from presidents to literary icons to teen heartthrobs. To date, a number of Vanity Fair covers have featured Leibovitz’s stunning—and often controversial—portraits of celebrities. Demi Moore (very pregnant & nude) and Whoopi Goldberg (half-submerged in a bathtub of milk) are among the most remembered actresses to grace the cover in recent years. Known for her ability to make her sitters become physically involved in her work, one of her most famous portraits is of the late artist Keith Haring, who painted himself like one of his canvases for the photo.
During the late 1980s, Leibovitz began work on a number of high-profile advertising campaigns. The most notable was the American Express “Membership” campaign, for which her portraits of celebrity cardholders, like Elmore Leonard, Tom Selleck, and Luciano Pavarotti, earned her a 1987 Clio Award.
In 1991, Leibovitz’s collection of over 200 color and black-and-white photographs were exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Later that year, a book was published to accompany the show titled Photographs: Annie Leibovitz 1970-1990.
In 1996, Leibovitz was chosen as the official photographer of the Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. A compilation of her black-and-white portraits of American athletes, including Carl Lewis and Michael Johnson, were published in the book Olympic Portraits (1991).
Widely considered one of America’s best portrait photographers, Annie Leibovitz published the book Women (1999), which was accompanied by an essay by friend and novelist Susan Sontag. With its title subject matter, Leibovitz presented an array of female images from Supreme Court Justices to Vegas showgirls to coal miners and farmers. Currently, many of her original prints are housed in various galleries throughout the United States.
In 2005, the Brooklyn Museum of Art did a retrospective on her work entitled "Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer’s Life, 1990–2005." Busy as ever, Annie Leibovitz continues to be in demand as a portrait photographer, often capturing arresting images of today’s celebrities.
Annie Leibovitz is the mother of three children. At the age of 51, she had her daughter, Sarah. In 2005, her twin daughters, Susan and Samuelle, were born with the help of a surrogate mother.
For most of her work she uses 2 lights with Elinchrom Octaboxes on boomstands. She switches between a Hasselblad H3 and a Canon 1Ds Mark III. It’s nice gear, but not overboard. I think she does great work because she is willing to prepare for three weeks, just for a half hour shoot. She has been working like that for decades.
What makes Anne Leibovitz stand out from the crowd of pro photographers is the fact that she is not only an excellent photographer, but an artist. And being an artist allows her to see and show the world a much wider range of possibilities in photography.
If anyone is interested, here's a link to her American Music series:
http://www.andrewsmithgallery.com/exhibitions/annieleibovitz/americanmusic/index.htm
Also, this Saturday, March 26, at 8/7c, on LOGO, a 2 hour premiere of
"Annie Leibovitz: Life through a Lens" will be showing. :)
*C'mon girls, let's keep rocking with Women's Heritage Month!
8 comments:
Thanks Camille a very interesting read!
Glad you enjoyed, Mary! :)
I would love to be Annie’s assistant for a few weeks. As your article underscores so well a lot of Annie’s edge as a photographer comes from the fact she was also a painter and can see things with an artist’s eye and doesn’t allow herself to be bogged down in the technical aspects like many photographers do.
I would love to be her assistant too and could benefit from technical training but unfortunately oft get confused by it or cannot retain what little I do manage to absorb.
Awesome post Camille. Thanks for introducing her, very interesting to me.
My pleasure, Kimmie.
Great article, Camille. I have seen some of the cover images, and pictures you mentioned, but never noticed who took them.
Thanks for the great read.
Thank you, Nicky. Welcome back! :)
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