01/18/2007
Category: News Article

Insight to the Stars

Douglas Kirkland show review in the Montague Reporter

Insight to the Stars

From the Montague Reporter 

Brian Mercer photo and illustration by Anja Schutz

BY ANN FEITELSON

TURNERS FALLS - Marilyn Monroe, covered only by a thin white sheet, her eyes half closed, her mouth half open, faces the doorway of the Hallmark Museum of Contemporary Photography. Her image was caught on film by Douglas Kirkland, who has photographed numerous other idols and icons of our day including Audrey Hepburn, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jack Nichol-son, Orson Welles, Paul Newman, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, John Lennon and Ringo Starr, Leonardo di Caprio and Kate Winslett. They are all there, on the corner of Third and Avenue A.

Kirkland's exhibit, “Face to Face: Portraits from Fifty Years" -- or, as he alternately subtitled it, "Favorite Encounters from a Half-Century Love Affair with Photography" -- runs through March 18th.

The photographs are worth seeing, as much for their subjects as for their intimacy, and also for what they reveal about the photographer. Kirkland's love affair is with his posers as well as the medium. The camera serving as intermediary, Kirkland negotiates access to a private world, and focuses on his subjects lovingly. They blossom accordingly; the photographs record that synergy. Kirkland has won the trust of many stars otherwise reclusive or elusive, and found unique ways to portray them.

"Photography is connecting with people," he said at the thronged (almost 500 attended) opening of his exhibit last Saturday afternoon. In the case of theMarilyn Monroe photograph, it was a connection not just between photographer and sex symbol, but, as he writes in his book An Evening with Marilyn, between a provocative 36-year-old woman with preferences for silk, Sinatra, and champagne; and an ambitious yet innocent 24-year-old man -- she called him a boy -- who shared the champagne and cantilevered and pretzeled himself into position from a balcony above her in search of the best vantage point. Somehow he kept his head. The delicately misty, seductive picture was on the cover of Look magazine.

The same year that he photographed Marilyn Monroe, 1961, Kirkland shot Art Buchwald in Paris, leaping, improbably spread-eagled in mid-air, the Eiffel tower splayed behind him. In his Saturday evening lecture at the Hallmark Institute of Photography, Kirkland explained that the photo was taken during his first trip to Europe; it expresses "the essence of joy of being in Paris."

Kirkland himself, now 72, leapt for joy, and for emphasis, at least a half-dozen times during his talk to an overflow audience of approximately 300 photographers, students of photography, fans and the general public looking for inspiration and insight into a legendary career.

Lanky and silver haired, energetic and enthusiastic, Kirkland leapt as he advised the aspiring photographers in the audience: "You have to makesomething happen." He sprang up and down when telling of his thrill and pride the first time his photo made the cover of Look. He related a story of meeting Hasselblad, the camera manufacturer, by chance on the street in New York , and leapt again, to underline "photography is fun." He jumped when telling how he wanted to lift up Marlene Dietrich from her sorrow over Hemingway's death. And he jumped yet again, to convey, "I have been so lucky," about the many adventures his camera has provided a passport to, all over the world. He has worked on all the continents (excluding Antarctica).

Was Kirkland's seeming luck in being in the right place at the right time a coincidence? Maybe not: "You always have to be reaching, finding, discovering, inventing," he said. And, "You've got to try as hard as you can every time. You gotta invent, explore, question, search…" Wonderful words to live by. Turners Falls certainly felt like the right place to be last Saturday. The band Viva Quetzal played all afternoon at the museum entrance; the stunning vegetable hors d'oeuvres table with radish lollipops was as luscious a display as it was sustaining, and constantly replenished. The scene was more New York City than humble Western Massachusetts. Even a cameraman from CBSChannel 3 in Springfield filmed the gallery-goers. Parking for the evening lecture was more what you would expect at the Franklin County Fair than a serious lecture. Following the talk, the line of people waiting for Kirkland to sign books of his photographs was three people wide and 25 long, stretching past the dessert array (the lollipops this time were bananas dipped in chocolate) and back to the vast lecture hall.

How does a portrait express or evoke the inner world with only black, white and grays?

To answer that, look at three of Kirkland's photos from the mid-90s on the left wall, towards the back of the gallery. The first, of Elena Bespalova, an art historian who wrote an introduction to Kirkland's book of nudes, is very high contrast, geisha-like, almost solely black and white. Her angled arms form a dynamic V-shaped buttress supporting her face. The arch of her eyelid rhymes with her arched lip, and again with a notch in her bangs; these repeated upward-pointing shapes imply vivacity, aspiration, elevation. Next, a melancholy Rod Steiger is all murky grays, very low in contrast. Every form bespeaks heaviness: his cheeks sag, his head presses on his arm and dents it. His arms are crossed, and he fills the space to bursting, suggesting imprisonment.

In the third photo, cinematographer Philippe Rousselot is at the bottom of the photograph, looking up, with only one eye visible, the other in shadowy obscurity. His hand on his cheek pulls his skin upward, distorting his face. It is not a familiar configuration. The tiny brilliant glints on Rousselot's revealed eye and shining from his hidden eye indicate incisiveness, quirkiness, the ability to see in the dark. This man would be fascinating to know.

As well as having insight and intuition, being a good photographer requires mastering a massive amount of technique and technical information. Kirkland is proficient with more types of cameras and film than you knew existed. He showed a 1960s photo of himself standing with every piece of equipment he used in one year at Look, and a veritable camera shop of stuff it was: tripods, lenses, filters, flashes, flares and strobes - not to mention numerous cameras.

Kirkland has kept up with the times and has fully embraced digital photography. Every one of the pictures at the museum is an ink-jet print via computer, not a gelatin silver print. All of Kirkland's past work has been archived and scanned into computers with mega memories of eight terabytes (the next order of magnitude after a gazillion gigabytes is terabytes). This has allowed him to go back and revive neglected moments and to re-see the past.

Digital technology gives better -- "amazing," he says -- archival quality, guaranteeing prints for 200 years. Kirkland's fans will be looking at them then.

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Valley Idol Karaoke Contest!

May 4-19, Shea Theater

WORD=OBJECT

Thru June 1
LOOT found+made 62 Avenue A in Turners Falls


Discover five artists whose work crosses the boundary between word and object. Paintings defaced by their artist with spray-painted slogans, interactive loose-leaf books made of plastic and vellum, posters where word enhances image and image enhances word, and hand-made books where the paper gives body to the poetry and the poetry breath to the paper. ASIZ Industries, Meghan Dewar, Christopher Janke, Jess Mynes, and Betsy Wheeler: these artists explore what exists between ink and page, between eye and ear, between word and object.

Details here.

 

 

Eilen Jewell + Lost Straitjackets

June 2, 8 pm, Shea Theater

It is the battered cassette jammed in the tape deck of the getaway car, the music Ida Lupino cues up on the roadhouse jukebox as she counts the till after close. This is Queen of the Minor Key by Eilen Jewell, a smart cookie with a heart of burnished gold and enough stories to keep even the rowdiest crowd hanging on her every word. Though its long shadows and dark corners make her kingdom feel intimate, her sovereign domain stretches as far as the imagination. Its denizens seek refuge in padded rooms, abandoned automobiles... and strong spirits. They defend their territory by any means necessary: weird voodoo, sawed-off shotguns, broken bottles.  More here.

Nina's Nook: Obsessively Spiritual Work

by Edite Cunha, Gina Vernava and others

Thru May 12th, 2012

 

"Images from the 50's" by Martin Karplus

Through June 10, 2012, Gallery at Hallmark

 

Images by Martin Karplus

"Images from the 50's" is a Kodachromatic journey back through time. This quietly nostalgic exhibition has a focus on post-war Europe, and the images reflect the journey of a sharp mind and watchful eye. Photographer (and world-renowned theoretical chemist) Martin Karplus beautifully preserves this era in sharp and vivid detail. His careful composition and ability to capture the decisive moment breathes life into these tableaus. 

The exhibition opening reception, available to the public at no charge, will take place at The Gallery at Hallmark on Friday, April 13th from 4:00 - 7:00pm. The show will be on display Fridays through Sundays from 1:00 to 5:00pm through Sunday, June 10th, 2012.

The Gallery at Hallmark is located at 85 Avenue A, Turners Falls, Massachusetts. Admission is free and free parking is available in the Shea Theater's designated areas.

Mutton & Mead Festival

Come partake in merriment and play as you are transported to another time: Merchants hawking their wares, Games to test the skills of both children and adults, Stages showcasing the realm's finest entertainers! Wander the streets listening to minstrels infusing the air with music. Meet Robin Hood and his Merry Men as well as Maid Marian! But watch out for the Sheriff! And the Twisted Pixies! Details here.

Songshop

 

Franklin County Falls Pumpkin Fest

October 20, 2012

 

The third annual Pumpkinfest will be held on Saturday, October 20, 2012 on Avenue A in Turners Falls. The event is FREE to the public. Just bring cash for food, beer, and fun! The event runs from 3-9pm, with FREE shuttling from Turners Falls High School and Sheffield School!  More info on how you can get involved here.

Strathmore Mill Opportunity

The Strathmore Mill Redevelopment Project will result in the restoration of a picturesque brick mill complex and adjacent grounds to its place as a cornerstone of the community and downtown economy in the historic village of Turners Falls, Massachusetts. The Town of Montague seeks an innovative partner to serve as master developer for this unique redevelopment opportunity in a location that boasts both natural beauty and the conveniences of an urban area. Details here.

RiverCulture Wins the Commonwealth Award!

RiverCulture is the proud recipient of the 2011/2012 Commonwealth Award, honoring exceptional achievement in the arts, humanities, and sciences. The Massachusetts Cultural Council presents the award every two years to individuals and organizations that have made extraordinary contributions to education, economic vitality, and quality of life in communities across the state.

 

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