Diane Arbus was a daughter of privilege who spent much of her adult life documenting those on the periphery of society. Since she killed herself in 1971, her unblinking portraits have made her a ...
Photographer Diane Arbus is known for her unconventional portraits, often of carnival performers, nudists, transvestites, or prostitutes. Somehow managing to be both comforting and unsettling, her ...
The movie "Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus," starring Nicole Kidman and Robert Downey Jr., is cinematically pretty complicated, so it seems valid to start off by saying a little about who ...
In 1958, in New York City, the upper class Diane Arbus is a frustrated and lonely woman with a conventional marriage with two daughters. Her husband is a photographer sponsored by the wealthy parents ...
Critics compared her unnerving images to those of Diane Arbus, but praised her ability to infuse her subjects with warmth and humanity. By Adam Nossiter How do you show 450 Arbus photos? In a maze of ...
"A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the less you know." " Diane Arbus. Revelations, the groundbreaking 2003 retrospective of the work of Diane Arbus, was a peek inside the ...
Pros: *Arbus is far more relevant to the contemporary state of photography than, say, Edward Weston, whom the museum recently showed. Photographers who are drawn to the grotesque and offbeat, such as ...
Photographer Diane Arbus saw a world that the masses try to avoid. With her portraits of middle-class couples, transvestites, children, carnival freaks, celebrities, nudists and more, she exploded ...
A spotty but thrilling tour of American art from Eisenhower to Nixon shows just how unhinged the ’60s were, and how hard it is to summarize the era. By Walker Mimms and Janice Chung Radiant Rembrandts ...
Since 1990, Orlando Weekly has served as the free, independent voice of Orlando, and we want to keep it that way. Becoming an Orlando Weekly Supporter for as little as $5 a month allows us to continue ...