diane arbus

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Diane Arbus Chloe Hagger, Sian Williams & Lauren Symons

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Page 1: Diane arbus

Diane ArbusChloe Hagger, Sian Williams & Lauren Symons

Page 2: Diane arbus

• March 14 1923- July 26 1971

• American photographer

• Felt alienated from “real life” as a child

• Grew up in a wealthy, family environment

• Married at 18 and sets up a fashion photography business with her husband

Page 3: Diane arbus

Style

• Most of Arbus’s work is in black and white square format, mostly portraits

• Arbus was often dismissed as a voyeur due to her photos of freaks, transvestites and nudists

• “Diane Arbus brought an unblinking, discerning eye to society's underside and to its pathetic, heroic, frightening, hilarious, all-too-human inhabitants” Frank Van Riper

• Her photos have a dark ‘edge’

Page 4: Diane arbus

Identical Twins

"She was involved in the question of identity. Who am I and who are you?”

Patricia Bosworth

Page 5: Diane arbus

‘A young man with curlers at home on West 20th Street, N.Y.C.,’

Page 6: Diane arbus

Untitled“Finally what I’ve been searching for”

Page 8: Diane arbus

“‘My work doesn’t do it for me anymore’ she said. She had spent months photographing these mental retardates and she was exhausted, drained from the experience, and the pictures were no good – out of

control. She could not confront these subjects as she had in the past – it was a new thing for her. She didn’t

know what it meant. She had just developed the contacts, but hadn’t printed them. Suddenly it didn’t

matter.”

Nancy Grossman

(A Biography by Patricia Bosworth)

Page 9: Diane arbus

Humanist or voyeur?

In today’s society would Arbus’ photos be socially acceptable?

Do you think her fascination with ‘freaks’ was a healthy obsession or something darker/deeper?

Do you think Arbus surrounded herself with ‘freaks’ because she felt like a freak herself?

Do you think Arbus’ photos reflect her insecurities and troubled childhood or was it just a fascination?