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Featured The Fall and Rise of Vivian Maier

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There has been a perennial question as to whether a photographer is considered talented, or more accurately a success, if their work is not seen, recognized and critiqued during their lifetime. In much like the question as to whether a photograph is really complete unless it is printed (and that's not the focus here), the issue of debate has been that if one takes photograph, if no-one apart from the photographer sees their work, are they 'successful' as a photographer?

Even more intriguing, why would someone take images and not even process the film? Would it be just a matter of economics, or was the imperative the actual act of capturing the image? Garry Winogrand, while famous and successful, left behind, unpublished, 300,000 images and more than 2,500 undeveloped rolls of film, so there is some argument for that...

This question has taken on more significance since the discovery of the works of Vivian Maier, who was a prolific photographer throughout her adult life, but who made very little attempt to share the images she took with the world. Yet, since her death, and her images have been brought to the world by others, she and her work have been the focus of great discussion and debate. While some have said that her material should be left unpublished and accused those who have done so of disrespecting her and ruthlessly leveraging her work for personal gain, the counter-argument has been that her images are of significance as Art and expressions of the zeitgeist in which they were taken.

I first encountered Maier back in 2015 when I saw the film 'Finding Vivian Maier', by John Maloof and Charlie Siskel on how they, and others, found her photographic materials when bidding for the contents of disused storage lockers. She had not kept up the payments and they were auctioned off. The film was to achieve critical acclaim, including nomination for an Academy Award.

Vivian-Maier-Self-Portrait-Custom.jpg
Vivian Maier, self portrait

These men and others often bid blind on contents that might hold interest or return, and each had found significant numbers (hundreds of thousands) of materials in the form of prints , negatives and even unprocessed film in boxes and trunks, along with cameras and a range of disparate bric-a-brac and personal items - including uncashed government cheques and vast numbers of newspapers. Maloof was looking for images of Chicago for a book he was working on, so he bid and won on a box of her stuff. While likely some ditched the images if they were not into photography, intrigued by the quality of the images they saw, these two and a few others started to explore their finds, and consolidate them - by buying up the unwanted items that other bidders had won.

Here is a link to the official trailer:
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The film, and follow-up books, chart the evolution and consolidation of these huge caches of material and the process of turning them into displays, publications and prints to share with the world. That attracted a lot of controversy as some considered the publication of her works as a violation of her personal life for profit, whereas the counter argument went that her work was of great artistic and social value and deserved to be recognized and shared as such.

Part of the controversy lay with the fact that Maier was (unknown to them) still alive at the time this began, but died within weeks of the initial purchases. It was necessary to track down any relatives who might have rights over the materials, a process hugely complicated by her family's incredible disfunction and chequered relationships, with many name changes and shifts of country.

Eventually, Maloof became the principle driver, and shared a few images on line to the delight and immediate praise of those who saw them. It was clear there was merit in her work, but getting the enormous reservoir of material processed, printed and presented was outside the ability of one or two people. Maloof took some images to galleries and museums, but was turned away as she had no status. So, he mounted his own exhibitions, starting in Chicago where it turned out to be of incredible interest and acclaim from the public. This encouraged him to process and share more material and it continued to yield enormous quantities of consistently high-quality images of life, predominantly from the 1960's to the 1980's.

Almost as intriguing was the mystery behind the woman. Who was she? What did she do? Why were these images not presented and recognized at the time? As investigations progressed, the story of a complex and flawed personality, a dysfunctional and complicated family life, and a career as a nanny gave a whole new dimension and level of intrigue to the story.
More recently, her work has been applauded by recognized photographers, critics, museums and galleries, and that has very recently culminated in her being inducted posthumously into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum.

Yet, simmering behind the scenes, continues the debate as to whether she would have been happy with this exposure and fame, and legal issues as to who has an interest in the estate have consumed researchers, lawyers and courts until recently. Meanwhile social commentators and academics have debated the ethics of publishing her work at all.

Her work is, to me, outstanding for its sheer volume and its consistency - she averaged over a roll of film per day through over three decades and had an amazing hit rate of great negatives.
Starting with a Kodak Box Camera, progressing up to a Rolleiflex camera, and later 35mm format as well, she produced still images in negative and transparency formats, in black and white, and colour, and in different negative formats - but predominantly square. She also produced 8 and 16mm videos.

She appears to have rarely cropped her images and they rarely would have needed to be as their composition was consistently bang-on for exposure, and even getting horizontals and verticals right within the bounds of the lenses and subjects she shot. She had a great nose for a subject: when to capture it, and from what angle. For someone shooting predominantly street images, with manual exposure and focus, this was significant.

Personally, she was a complex and secretive person. Working as a nanny, in the US - partly NY but predominantly Chicago - she took her camera everywhere, often dragging the children she minded along to situations and places that would have raised more than a few eyebrow from parents or social agencies. She was intensely private about her personal life, but not afraid to engage with others to explore their situations or to get opinions on current events. Her subjects echo a range of genres from families to flops via macabre trash, or somehow getting to shoot film stars up close on set. She was not afraid to push to get her shots, yet she left thousands of rolls of film unprocessed and many more unprinted.

With my own interest in the history of photography, I have been exploring this unique and complex person through the films and books charting her life, and this Christmas will invest in the most comprehensive publication of her work: Vivian Maier: A Photographer Found, by John Maloof.

I hope that one day an exhibition of her work will make it to NZ so I can see more of these images. She shot in a genre that I have not engaged with in any great depth, but can certainly appreciate, and I am hugely impressed by the breadth and depth of her work.

Would she be comfortable with all this exposure? Opinions from those who knew her vary to a degree, but the consensus is that she might have been pleased to see the recognition of her work, but not of the exposure of herself personally. As she grew older, she became more reclusive and harder to engage with, yet some of the children she had minded, and who loved her - now grown, helped to support her until her death in 2009. While she died in diminished circumstances, alone and in a depressed state; posthumously, she has achieved major recognition and risen to great heights in the world of artistical photography. That is one heck of a legacy...

For any student of photography, but particularly those inclined to street, portraiture or genre images, her work is a worthy source of study. As the great (and now late) photographer Elliott Erwitt said "No amount of skill compensates for the ability to observe", and she combines that and a technical mastery of her cameras.

To see a show of her images see:
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The Unseen Vivian Maier video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWiPxGuA8Xo
YOUTUBE.COM

[Originally posted on 13 December 2023]
 
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I saw that documentary several years ago and became fascinated by her work. She had an artist eye and some of her images outstanding. If y'all haven't seen the documentary, it is well worth the watch. Highly recommend.
 
I saw that documentary several years ago and became fascinated by her work. She had an artist eye and some of her images outstanding. If y'all haven't seen the documentary, it is well worth the watch. Highly recommend.
I totally agree. It is a good thing that she has finally had some 'official' recognition, and I hope that will lead to more of the major galleries and art establishment recognizing and showing her work.
 
I agree, I saw the Documentary and it raises as many questions as it answers. All in all, I'm glad that her work is published. I find it fascinating, almost as much as her subjects!
 
She was an enigma, clearly a photographer that should have been up there with some of the greats, but she kept it all private. Such a fascinating and sad story.
 
She was an enigma, clearly a photographer that should have been up there with some of the greats, but she kept it all private. Such a fascinating and sad story.
You're not wrong. I put her alongside my other interest, Lee Miller but a very different situation.

Miller had huge talent and intelligence, a tragic episode in childhood, a pioneering 'new woman' who fought to be treated as an equal in a chauvinistic world - not helped by her stunning beauty. Outstanding technical and creative skills as a photographer, war correspondent and even cordon bleu chef! Her last years post WWII were so tragic - as a victim of PTSD (which of course was not recognized as such). Perhaps I shall do a piece on her too...
 
I did do a lot of reading up on her, a while back. I thought her photos were really fascinating and interesting.
 
I'd lost track of Vivian Maier's work several years ago. Thanks for refreshing my memory. The video compilation linked above is almost overwhelming. And the soundtrack used with these images is simply perfection, no small feat in itself.

Throughout the video I kept flashing back to scenes from Joe Pesci's 1992 movie The Public Eye. Loosely based on the work of Arthur "Weegee" Fellig, the film's combination of the right images with the right music will keep you glued to the screen.
 
Ok. I will get my whole staff onto it - that would be me, myself, and I! ;)
What about oneself? What's that guy doing? Shesh, what a slacker.
 
I've been very lucky to visit two of Ms. Maier's exhibits in Chicago over the years. The first was in 2011, and then again about a year later. Most all prints were stunning for someone with no formal training, and yet she had time to hone her shooting skills, and I'd imagine had enough personality to get people to occasionally pose for some of her photos. Many of the prints were way smaller than what I would have expected, so you'd need to get close up to see the details. While street photography is not in my routine genre, I was nevertheless greatly impressed. At that time, only about 15% of her vast work was inspected for public review, and what was on display represented about 2% of even that.

The documentary was shown at our local theater. It seemed to raise more questions than it answered. At one time, Maier worked for Phil Donahue watching the kids and the house. I think I remember him being interviewed in the movie.
 
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I remember I think from that documentary she went back to Europe to visit her families city/town. One old fellow said people take pictures at weddings, etc. She takes pictures of garbage cans. :)
 
I have been reading two books on her life: Vivian Maier Developed, by Ann Marks, and Vivian Maier: A Photographer's Life and Afterlife, by Pamela Bannos. Both are substantial documents and the authors have taken some time to trace the convoluted and highly disruptive family into which she was born and raised. There were marriages, divorces, name changes, she was left with relatives and taken back again, and there is a suggestion that she may have been violated as a child or teenager - which would explain both some of her eccentric and extreme behaviours of secrecy and hoarding - both symptoms of an upbringing that was disruptive and possibly traumatic. While she was born in NY, she was taken to live with relatives in an obscure village in France, where her grandparents had lived, and it was there she acquired her French accent and behaviour. Certainly, the secretive behaviour of her immediate family: changing names, avoiding being recorded in censuses etc., gives some context to her own propensity to do the same and utter reluctance to share the most personal basic information with strangers, and even reluctance to engage with government agencies - when she died in some poverty, there were nevertheless thousands of dollars worth of uncashed IRS checques to her credit left behind.

The two books I have been reading are both written by academics: the former by a freelance academic research historian, and the latter by a professor of art and photography at Northwestern University. As such, they each take different slants on their approach to her life, and their tone likely reflects their relationship with, and degree of access to, the materials from Maloof and his associates. A good summation of the book slants taken by the two authors is presented in this article in the NY Times: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/15/books/review-vivian-maier-developed-ann-marks.html

In essence while Bannos is critical, if not hostile to the efforts to bring Maier's works to the public, Marks is far more sympathetic to the efforts of Maloof and his a colleagues and while Bannos puts weight to the then on-going legal battles, Marks' book is far less judgmental and sums up the final results to demonstrate that the driver was not exploitation for profit (for a long time there was none). In a way, I get the impression that while Bannos is more interested in the photography and its outcomes, Marks is more focused on Maier the person and those bringing her work to light. This dichotomy further reinforces the on-going debate as to whether Maier would have liked to see her images published and her personal life exposed. After spending some time trying to understand this, the best summation I can make is that she would likely have been pleased to see her work recognized and lauded, she would have absolutely hated the exposure of her personal life.

There have been numerous exhibitions of her work, producing a range of detailed catalogues and reviews. I like this one on her colour photography from the BBC: https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20200902-vivian-maier-the-elusive-genius-who-hid-herself-away

One has to be wary of academics who add their own intellectual slant into unexplained behaviours. For example the article suggests: "Perhaps, indeed, even all her hoarding – the newspapers, the receipts, the ticket stubs, the indecipherable scribbled notes – were a kind of artistic process, a way of recording and registering her existence". To me, that smacks of taking a behaviour and embellishing it with higher intellectual and artistic intent when it is far more likely that the hoarding is the result of Maier's subconscious insecurities as a child growing up in the depression and war years when one kept what one could, and her insecurities at being moved from person to person as a child - both elements that have been shown to leading to hoarding behaviour. I suspect there will be more and more of this academic enhancement over time...

I have on order a copy of the most inclusive catalogue of her work to date: "Vivian Maier, A Photographer Found" by Maloof - who seems to have been a lot more than just a buyer of bric-a-brac from storage locker sales - John Maloof is a filmmaker, photographer, and historian. To quote Microsoft Copilot's summation: on Maloof:

In 2007, Maloof bought a box full of negatives at an auction for $400. As he sorted through them, he realized he had stumbled upon a treasure trove of charismatic, crisply composed pictures of Chicago in the 1950s and 60s. The anonymous photographer was later identified as Vivian Maier, a former professional carer who had kept her images and her remarkable talent hidden from everyone she knew.

Maloof managed to track down more work by Maier, eventually amassing an archive of up to 100,000 negatives and some 3,000 prints, plus numerous film rolls, audio interviews, receipts, letters, and personal effects. He has since worked tirelessly to bring Maier’s work to the public eye, leading to her posthumous recognition as one of the greatest photographers of the 20th century.

Maloof co-directed the Oscar-nominated documentary “Finding Vivian Maier”, which tells the story of his efforts to uncover the life and work of the enigmatic nanny-turned-photographer. He is also the editor of the book "Vivian Maier: Street Photographer
".

So, to me Maloof is far more than a guy who saw money in an abandoned set of pictures. He has brought Maier's work to us to appreciate and made the world of photographic art that much richer.

 
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Certainly, the secretive behaviour of her immediate family: changing names, avoiding being recorded in censuses etc., gives some context to her own propensity to do the same and utter reluctance to share the most personal basic information with strangers, and even reluctance to engage with government agencies - when she died in some poverty, there were nevertheless thousands of dollars worth of uncashed IRS checques to her credit left behind.
Neglecting to cash the checks might also be caused by cognitive decline.
 
Neglecting to cash the checks might also be caused by cognitive decline.
Not cashing the cheques is, I think more of an example of her reclusiveness. These cheques date back decades to when she was quite young, and she just hid them away. So, I personally go for her not wanting anything to do with authorities... All we can do is speculate.
 
That is odd.
Both authors, in looking at her grandparents, parents and upbringing detail a family that was utterly, and I mean utterly dysfunctional - I have never seen anything like it, and it would be impossible to explain really without reading whole chapters of the books. She had a half-sister with whom she never had correspondence, she was left out of her mother's will, she left no will indicating legacies to her family for any of her possessions.

All I can say is that when I take that into account, and that she was a child of the depression and WWII, when there were many privations, the combination of these influences in her life may well have led to he reclusive behaviour and hoarding. I grew up in the UK in the 1950's when latter years of post war rationing were still in force and when many things continued to be in short supply. So, if one saw something you got more than one if you could and kept them in case there were no more - I have felt that influence throughout my life and have had to strive to stop that temptation to hoard in an era of plenty and fast obsolescence - so I can see the power of those influences in one far more exposed to them at a younger age.
 
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