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Category Archives: Books

Vivian Maier

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by Angie in 1950's, 1960's, 1970's, Books, stuff to see

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John Maloof, Storage Wars, Vivian Maier

Vivian Maier (February 1, 1926 – April 21, 2009) was a nanny by trade, but a documentarian by heart.  On her downtime she’d roam the streets photographing a myriad of people and things.  Children, elderly, the discarded whether it be objects or people.

You notice her winking wit, sly humor, graphic sensibilities right away.  This was the 50’s and 60’s, the great boom time in post-war America, but she seems more interested in the ones that were being ignored by the wave of optimism and upward mobility.

Her story is sad, but compelling.  She never married, didn’t have many close friends, but loved the children she cared for as if they were her own.  Three of the children ended up helping her out financially when she became destitute and alone in her old age.  She hoarded rolls and rolls of undeveloped film and put them in storage.  When she passed away, her storage lockers went up for auction and that’s how John Maloof, realtor and amateur historian, found her.  He has since been her biggest cheerleader, staging exhibitions, and getting a book of her work published, “Vivian Maier: Street Photographer.”

Looks like it could've been taken by any street style blogger, yesterday. Timeless. New York, 1954.

Looks like a movie set. January 9, 1957, Florida.

Her charges said she was like Mary Poppins, and in this self portrait she really looks the part with the hat, bicycle and long overcoat. She's inspiring me to write a character based on her. 1959.

You can tell how shy she was by her self-portraits. She likes seeing herself as tiny reflections, or just her shadows. She never looks made up, always with a plain, serious, somewhat self-conscious expression. 1953.

The great irony is that all this fame, money, and acclaim showering her is posthumous, and all the attention might have made her uncomfortable.  But at least she gets the adoration, and respect for her life long dedication to her art.

If you’re in the Brooklyn area on Friday, November 18, there will be a slideshow presentation and Q&A with John Maloof at the powerHouse Arena.

http://www.vivianmaier.com/

In related news, “treasure found in a storage unit auction…”

http://news.yahoo.com/man-reported-500-000-worth-treasure-storage-unit-200501811.html

Makes you wanna go on “Storage Wars.”  Who knows you might find some gold, or the next Vivian Maier.

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Marisa Berenson: A Life in Pictures

08 Tuesday Nov 2011

Posted by Angie in 1960's, 1970's, Books

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Arnaud de Rosnay, Elsa Schiaparelli, Jason Duzansky, Linda Bey, Marisa Berenson, Steven Meisel, Vogue

She has led a charmed life and has the pictures to prove it.  The daughter of an American diplomat and Italian Countess, granddaughter of designer Elsa Schiaparelli, Marisa Berenson was jet-setting glamour girl of the 70’s.  She was a top model in the 60’s, and parlayed that popularity to launch an acting career with serious directors: Luchino Visconti’s “Death in Venice,” Bob Fosse’s “Cabaret,” and Stanley Kubrick’s “Barry Lyndon.”

That ain’t no spray tan. Aaah, to be a rich hippie in the 60’s. Marisa Berenson. Photo by Arnaud de Rosnay, Vogue, January 1968.

Marisa Berenson: A Life in Pictures, written by Marisa Berenson, Edited by Steven Meisel and Jason Duzansky, Contribution by Lina Bey.  Published by Rizzoli.

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Saul Bass: A Life in Film & Design

07 Monday Nov 2011

Posted by Angie in Books

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Film & Design, Jennifer Bass, Pat Kirkham, Saul Bass

Saul Bass: A Life in Film & Design, by Jennifer Bass (his daughter) and Pat Kirkham (design historian) looks like a must buy.  Chock full-o-images, over 1,400, it should give you some brain marinade.  A mix of Picasso meets 60’s mod, I LOVE IT!  His style is so distinctive you can literally spot it a mile away. Only he could make title sequences compete with being the coolest part of the movie.

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Pauline Kael – New Bio

26 Wednesday Oct 2011

Posted by Angie in Books

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Brian Kellow, Pauline Kael

Brian Kellow’s new biography, “Pauline Kael, A Life in the Dark,” got me thinking about this preeminent American movie critic.  She’s like patient zero, the first to have the virus from which all subsequent infections can be traced.  Most film critics can be traced back to her.  Quentin Tarantino said that he didn’t go to film school, didn’t have to because he read all of Kael’s reviews.  Such was her enthusiasm, and descriptive power.  She was our jungle guide through the heady 60’s, 70’s, and early 80’s when art house and American studio films reached the nexus of critical and commercial success.  We loved her because she was a straight-shooter and spoke plainly but colorfully at the same time.  No big words, big ideas.  She broke it down for us, told us what was good, and more importantly, WHY.  In the end, she sorta became the snob her younger self might have roasted on a spit, but it doesn’t matter.  Her work speaks for itself.

After reading about her, read her reviews.  If anything, they’ll make you a better writer, and possibly a more enlightened movie goer.

Earlier reviews.

New anthology.

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FAVES, no particular order

Directed by James Ivory, Costume Design Jenny Beavan, 1985

Directed by Jack Clayton, Costume Design Theoni V. Aldredge, 1974

Directed by Sally Potter, Costume Design Sandy Powell, 1992

Direct by Arthur Penn, Costume Design Theadora Van Runkle, 1967

Directed by Iain Softley, Costume Design Sandy Powell, 1997

Directed by Wong Kar Wai, Costume Design William Chang, 2000

Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson, Costume Design Mark Bridges, 2007

Directed by Cary Joji Fukanaga, Costume Design Michael O'Connor 2011

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