Ventes du 09/11/2007 au 03/02/2008 Terminé
The Photographers' Gallery 5 and 8 Great Newport Street WC2H7HY London Royaume-Uni
Celebrating the centenary of one of the most significant contributors to the history of photography, Print Sales exhibits the work of Lee Miller.
Both vintage and modern linited-edition prints will be on display and for sale, spanning her whole career, from Surrealist collaborations with Man Ray and her development of solarisation, to her experiences in Eqypt, her work for British Vogue, photographs made as a US War Correspondent and intimate portraits of some of the most significant artists of the twentieth century.
Prices
15 x 19” limited-edition platinum prints from £850
12 x 16” limited-edition silver gelatin prints from £850
Uneditioned silver gelatin prints from £750
Vintage prices on request.
All prices exclusive of vat and framing.
Technical note
Each archival silver gelatin print is produced by Carole Callow of The Lee Miller Archives and is stamped on the reverse with a printer's stamp and authentication stamp signed by Lee Miller's son Antony Penrose with the Lee Miller Archives blindstamp placed within the margin. Platinum palladium prints made by Max and Paul Caffell are marked with the Studio 31 and Lee Miller Archives blindstamp placed in the margin.
Lee Miller (1907-1977) grew up in Poughkeepsie, New York, and her startling beauty led her in 1927 to model for American Vogue. Miller was a charismatic and outgoing woman whose friendships with the fashion photographers George Hoyningen-Huene and Edward Steichen encouraged a passion for photographic studies that had grown from her father's interest in amateur photography.
Having developed her technical skills, Miller moved to Paris in 1929 where she persuaded Man Ray to accept her as his student. Many prints from this flourishing period of creativity are available for sale including the remarkable example of the solarisation technique that Miller developed with Man Ray as seen in one of her most iconic photographs Solarised Portrait of Unknown Woman, Paris 1930.
Having succeeded in setting up her own studio in Paris, Miller returned to New York in 1932 where she continued her practice before moving to Cairo with her husband, wealthy Egyptian businessman Aziz Eloui Bey. New experiences of unfamiliar landscapes and culture led Miller to immerse herself in photography and prints from this period such as the famous Portrait of Space, 1937, are prime examples of her greatest accomplishments. Central to her life and inspiration remained the artists she had met in Europe and during a visit to Paris in 1937 she met Roland Penrose, the Surrealist artist who was to become her second husband.
In 1939 she left Egypt for London shortly before World War II broke out, and moved in with Roland Penrose, defying orders from the US Embassy to return to America. She subsequently took a job as a freelance photographer on Vogue and popularised the new style of location fashion photography, many examples of which are for sale.
In 1942 she signed up as a US war correspondent, producing startling images of the siege of St. Malo, the liberation of Paris, and the Nazi concentration camp at Dachau. Miller continued to report from post-war Europe before returning to England in 1947, where she produced her captivating portraits of the frequent visitors to their home, including Picasso, Braque, and Miro, before retreating completely from her turbulent life in photography.
The Photographers' Gallery 5 and 8 Great Newport Street WC2H7HY London Royaume-Uni