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NEW YORK — Diane Arbus was a photographer of great renown whose work continues to stir emotions and engage viewers. Now her ...
‘I would like to photograph everybody,’ wrote Diane Arbus in a 1960 letter to the artist and art director Marvin Israel. Her first photo essay, published that July in Esquire magazine, revealed ...
Diane Arbus and the Too-Revealing Detail In “Constellation,” the photographer’s largest-ever show in New York, images linger in the strange space between intention and effect.
Diane Arbus’s stark black and white photographs convey the deep psychological intensity of her subjects, from marginalized outsiders to children and families, peeling back the veneer of postwar ...
Maggie Shannon’s black-and-white images of childbirth in the COVID era capture the awe-inspiring, quotidian experience of turning one person into two.
Diane Arbus, in 450 Photos: The photographer’s largest show ever mounted is in a maze of an exhibit at the Park Avenue Armory.
He worked as an assistant to the photographer Philippe Halsman, and to the team of Allan and Diane Arbus, in addition to studying at Brooklyn College and serving in the U.S. Army. Mr. Kramer in 2023.
This week, Martha Schwendener covers Astrid Klein’s “photoworks,” the group show “Godzilla,” featuring Asian American artists, David Levine’s hypnotic volumetric projection and ...
There are photographs by Diane Arbus, lithographs by de Chirico, and a painting by Kara Walker, held up by specially made brass rails to preserve the wallpaper.
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