Mike Disfarmer article in NYT

W

wlewisiii

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http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/22/arts/design/22disf.html?8hpib

is an interesting little piece on a studio photographer from Heber Springs, Ark. From the 20's to the 50's he was an extremely encentric portrait photographer. In a way, though, the shots in the article seem to be prefiguring the work of Richard Avedon in "In The American West".

"There is no new thing under the sun", perhaps?

William
 
peter_n said:
Interesting article. Thanks for sharing - those prints are going for unbelievable prices! 😱

I visited the www.disfarmer.com website to look at images. Non vintage prints, 8/5x11 are $800. The site said only that they are "archival prints" so I wrote asking if the prints are inkjet or chemical. The answer is that the prints are silver, but the fellow who answered didn't know what sort of paper they're being printed on. $30,000 *is* an awful lot of money for a print like that.... 🙂

Ed
 
It's nice that Disfarmer is back in the news. I remember back in the '70s?... '80s?... when a big exhibit and book helped give him a major art-critical reputation. For a while I think he was right up there with Atget, another mystery man "discovered" by the art community after the fact, and since then I think it's been up and down in cycles. This new find of vintage prints, with its interesting back story, should be enough to spark the market again.

His best work IS brilliant, very somber and a bit confrontational just in how plain it is; it has a stillness to it, a sense that time had stopped forever when he pressed the shutter. (Of course he didn't use a rangefinder camera; one account I read said that he had his portrait camera built into a wall in his studio, so he could leave the subject to fidget by him/herself in one room while Disfarmer disappeared into the other room to take pictures.)

As to $30,000 being an awful lot of money -- well, it is, but keep in mind that that figure was for the vintage prints -- the ones made at the time Disfarmer was working. The thing about those is that there's a finite supply -- there will never be more of them than there are right now.

It's just like shopping for old cameras: If you see an ordinary Fed 5 or Canon 7 or whatever at an outlandish price, you pass on it because you know you'll have lots of chances to buy another just like it for a more reasonable figure. But if the camera is something really rare -- say, a Minolta Sky or a Contax VK27 -- you have to factor in the likelihood that you may never have another chance to buy one, so if you want it and have the money, you have to pay the asking price.
 
Apologies for being contrary, but most old prints do nothing for me unless I know something about the subject being photographed or there is outstanding artistic merit. Judging by the article, the "shyness and awkwardness" of the subjects is a result of a rude and uncooperative photographer rather than a "natural" state.This seems more a publicity dirve and money-making exercise rather than artistic appreciation - I am sure many of us have similar old photos in our family albums.
 
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