Annie Leibovitz: The Early Years, 1970-1983
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For more than half a century,Annie Leibovitzhas been taking
culture-defining photographs. Her portraits of politicians,
performers, athletes, businesspeople, and royalty make up agallery
of our time, imprinted on our collective consciousness by both the
singularity of their subjects and Leibovitz’s inimitable style.The
catalogue to an installation at the LUMA Foundation in Arles, Annie
Leibovitz: The Early Years, 1970–1983returns to Leibovitz’s
origins. It begins with a moment of artistic revelation: the
spontaneous shot that made Leibovitz think she could transition
from painting to photography as her area of study at the San
Francisco Art Institute. The meticulously and personally curated
collection, including contact sheets and Polaroids, provides a
vivid document both of Leibovitz’s development as a young artistand
of a pivotal era.Leibovitz’s reportage-like photo stories for
Rolling Stone, which she began working for when she was still a
student, record such heady political, cultural, and
counter-cultural developments as the Vietnam War protests, the
launch of Apollo 17, the presidential campaign of 1972, Richard
Nixon’s resignationin 1974, and the Rolling Stones on tourin 1975.
Then, as now, Leibovitz won the trust of the prominent and famous,
and the book’s pages are animated by many familiar faces, among
them Muhammad Ali, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ken Kesey, Patti
Smith, Bruce Springsteen, Joan Didion, andDebbie Harry, as well as
John Lennonand Yoko Ono, captured in their now iconic embrace just
hours before Lennon was assassinated.Throughout the book, the
portraits and reportage are linked to images of cars, driving, and
even a series on California highway patrolmen. In many ways, it’s a
celebration of life on the road—the frenetic rhythms, the chance
encounters, the meditative opportunities. And with its rich
archival aspects, it is also a tribute to an earlier time and a
young photographer enmeshed in a culture that was itself in
transition.