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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Currently Hanging: The Nanny Who Owned Chicago

Posted by on Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 4:08 PM

Vivian Maier haunted the city of Chicago. She took this in 1968 in the north suburbs.
  • Courtesy Photo Center NW
  • Vivian Maier haunted the city of Chicago. She took this in 1968 in the north suburbs.

Nobody except the people who knew Vivian Maier during her quiet life as a nanny in Chicago knew that she was taking photographs constantly, amassing a collection that would become significant in the canons both of street photography and the plain old documentary history of a city. She was "discovered" after her death, and that makes for a juicy story, but ultimately, it's the work that matters or not. A fraction of her 100,000 negatives and prints are visiting Photographic Center Northwest through Saturday; I recommend checking it out.

A story like this easily leads to sentimentalization and, frankly, low standards for deciding what's interesting. Some of the pictures here really are not. At the same time, some are heightened by their backstory, especially the shadowy self-portraits—or really, any of the works that hint at a hidden side of things. What's underneath a bathing suit. What entertainments await behind a ticket window. What the face that goes with those legs looks like.

At Coney Island, circa early 1950s.
  • Courtesy Photo Center NW
  • At Coney Island, circa early 1950s.

Is Maier a master? I don't know. This show is just a sliver of what she was capable of, and uneven. Who knows what else there is? Photography is at least half editing. (Then again, what isn't?) See what you think at the gallery.

Below is one more image for now. I want to say that you can just tell this was taken by a woman, it's so in another world from a pure objectification shot like this one by Jack Welpott (NSFW) (Welpott's work is in Out [o] Fashion Photography at the Henry Art Gallery).

I love moments like this one in the show. Who else would take a shot like this one?
  • Courtesy of Photo Center NW
  • I love moments like this one in the show. Who else would take a shot like this one?

And you can find a nice full review of the show at Vanguard Seattle here.

One more I like for its juxtaposition of the shadowy woman and the modernist Los Angeles architecture, on the jump.

Taken in 1955.
  • Courtesy Photo Center NW
  • Taken in 1955.

 

Comments (4) RSS

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Fnarf 1
I love her. I first read about her a couple of years ago. To me, the question "is it art?" is nowhere near as interesting as the photos. Unevenness can be a virtue, and the thousands of glimpses she captured are far more interesting than yet another dude taking yet another set of nude pics. Those pics tell us nothing we don't already know; Maier's show us something new in every one.

I wonder if she even knew what she was up to. She must have! Did she know who Lee Friedlander was?
Posted by Fnarf http://www.facebook.com/fnarf on March 19, 2013 at 5:07 PM
2
i saw the exhibit of her work in new york about a year or so ago. while i think you're right about some of it being uneven, her work and story is fascinating. definitely worth investigating.
Posted by jayme on March 19, 2013 at 6:01 PM
Nelson Bradley 3
In terms of sheer volume, Gary Winogrand also comes to mind.
Posted by Nelson Bradley on March 19, 2013 at 7:39 PM
4
I saw a Maier exhibit at the Chicago History Museum last month. She's the real deal. Yes, she knew her Friedlander, Winogrand, and Frank, but if she'd been known back in the day, we'd all be saying Friedlander, Winogrand, and Frank knew their Maier. Go.
Posted by Rolleiflex on March 19, 2013 at 8:56 PM

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