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BIOGRAPHIES
PENN, IRVING
USA, 1917
"Photographing a cake can be art," Irving Penn asserted
when he opened his studio in 1953. Before long he was backing up
his statement with a series of advertising illustrations that created
a new high standard in the field and established a reputation that
has kept him in the top bracket ever since.
Penn has won renown as much in editorial photography as in advertising
illustration, and his innovations especially in portraiture and
still life have set him apart stylistically. In later years he turned
to television commercials as a outlet for his unique talent. One
of the most imitated among contemporary photographers, his work
has been widely recognized and extolled
Miles
In addition to his work for Vogue magazine (the American, British,
and French editions) Penn has been represented in many important
photographic collections, including those of the Museum of Modem
Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Addison Gallery of American
Art, and the Baltimore Museum of Art.
In 1958 Irving Penn was named one of "The World’s 10
Greatest Photographers" in an international poll conducted
by Popular Photography Magazine. Penn’s statement at the time
is a remarkable summation of purpose and idealism: "I am a
professional photographer because it is the best way I know to earn
the money I require to take care of my wife and children."
Irving Penn was born June 16, 1917 in Plainfield, N.J. Educated
in public schools, he enrolled at the age of 18 in a four-year course
at the Philadelphia Museum School of Art, where Alexey Brodovitch
taught him advertising design. While training for a career as an
art director, Penn worked the last two summers for Harper’s
Bazaar magazine as an office boy and apprentice artist, sketching
shoes. At this time he had no thought of becoming a photographer.
His first job on graduating in 1938 was art director of the Junior
League magazine, later he worked in the same capacity for Saks Fifth
Avenue department store. At the age of 25, he quit his job and used
his small savings to go to Mexico, where he painted a full year
before he convinced himself he would never be more than a mediocre
painter.
Returning to New York, he won an audience with Alexander Liberman,
art director of Vogue magazine, who hired Penn as his assistant,
specifically to suggest photographic covers for Vogue. The staff
photographers didn’t think much of his ideas, but Liberman
did and asked Penn to take the pictures himself. Using a borrowed
camera, and drawing on his art background and experience, Penn arranged
a still life consisting of a big brown leather bag, beige scarf
and gloves, lemons, oranges, and a huge topaz. It was published
as the Vogue cover for the issue of October 1, 1943, and launched
Penn on his photographic career.
Penn soon demonstrated his extraordinary capacity for work, versatility,
inventiveness, and imagination in a number of fields including editorial
illustration, advertising, photojournalism, portraits, still life,
travel, and television.
In his earlier work Penn was fond of using a particular device
in his portrait work, replacing it with a fresh one from time to
time. At one time he placed two backgrounds to form a corner into
which his subject was asked to enter. It was, as Penn explains,
a means of closing people in. Some people felt secure in this spot,
some felt trapped. Their reaction made them quickly available to
the camera." His subjects during this "corner period"
included Noel Coward, the Duchess of Windsor, and Spencer Tracy,
most of whom complied readily.
Another time Penn used an old rug he had picked up in one of the
shops on Third Avenue in New York. It was his portrait prop for
a period of about three months. "The rug merged with the background
in tone value," he recalls, "and its form could be changed
by the number and placement of boxes used under it. It was a good
foil for peoples’ faces." Among the great subjects for
this series was John Dewey and Alfred Hitchcock.
Two series of portraits are especially memorable. One was made
during Christmas in Cuzco, Peru, the other in studios in London,
Paris, and New York. The first, in 1948 high in the Andes, followed
a fashion assignment. With a few days to spend between planes, Penn
persuaded the local photographer to rent him his studio. Pushing
aside the ancient studio camera and picking up his Rollei, Penn
made some 200 portraits in color and in black-and-white, in a studio
that had a stone floor, a painted background, a small rug, and an
upholstered posing chair similar to a piano stool.
The other series was the famous "Small Trades" project,
a large number of workers posing formally in their work clothes
and holding the implements of their trade or occupation. Each was
posed against a plain background and lighted from the side, the
characteristic lighting that has become identified with most of
Penn’s portraiture.
Penn varied his equipment, materials, and methods in line with
the assignment and his interpretation of it. Thus, he will turn
to the Leica or Nikon and a selection of lenses. Or he will go to
the 4X5 or 8X10 Deardorff view cameras, or the Rolleiflex or Hasselblad.
Penn supervised all the black-and-white processing in his studio,
but sent his color work to an outside laboratory.
We are fortunate that Irving Pen, now in his 80’s, is still
alive and living in New York City. His legacy to the art and craft
of photography will not soon be forgotten!
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