Remembering Martin Munkácsi on his birthday 🎂
📷 Self-Portrait Shooting Fashion in Long Island Sound, 1935
Richard Avedon wrote admiringly about his "photographs of falcons, camels & women striding parallel to the sea, unconcerned with his camera, freed by his dream of them."
Martin Munkácsi
Lucile Brokaw, Harper's Bazaar, December 1933
This is a landmark shot in the history of fashion photography. Munkácsi freed the genre from the studio; he was called "the kinetic man".
Coffee with Martin Munkácsi ☕️
Having Fun at Breakfast, Berlin, c. 1933
Martin Munkácsi
Nude with Parasol, Harper's Bazaar, July 1935
Martin Munkácsi
Fred Astaire for Life magazine, 1936
Martin Munkácsi
New York World's Fair, Harper's Bazaar, September 1938
Martin Munkácsi
California, c. 1935
Martin Munkácsi
Jumping a Puddle, 1934
"He brought a taste for happiness and honesty and a love of women to what was, before him, a joyless, lying art."
- Richard Avedon on the fashion photography of Martin Munkácsi
📷 Harper's Bazaar, 1940
Martin Munkácsi, whose birthday is today, had a younger brother, Menyhert, also a photographer. Since I don't have a birthday for Muky (his professional name), I'll add some of his photos to this thread.
His shot of Piper Laurie & Paul Newman on the set of The Hustler, 1954
Muky, aka Menyhert Munkácsi, was an on set still photographer by trade.
"He was sort of famous for being almost invisible on the set. Still photographers were the invisible men of this industry."
- Richard Koszarski
📷 12 Angry Men, 1957
Anna Magnani & Tennessee Williams on the set of The Fugitive Kind
📷 Muky, 1960
James Cagney & director Milos Forman on the set of Ragtime, 1981. This was one of Muky's last projects; he died in 1999. #stillonset
Muky worked on 75 films, though IMDb has only 23 credits listed.
"His pictures have this great painterly quality to them, even though he had the job of documenting every important scene in the film."
- Richard Koszarski
📷 Dustin Hoffman & Jon Voight in Midnight Cowboy, 1969
Muky began in Hollywood in the mid-30s. "MGM had a European still photographer, so Warner wanted one, too". Here's a shot he took of Orson Welles removing his Citizen Kane makeup.
Muky was busy on the West Coast, but he moved to New York for 12 Angry Men, & stuck around.
"You have to have your own artistic integrity, but you have to serve the film. You can't come up with a bunch of stills that are all Muky. They also need to look like the work of Sidney Lumet."
- still photographer Muky
Muky's photo of Marlon Brando & Maureen Stapleton on the set of The Fugitive Kind, 1960.
Who's that in the sunglasses? Tennessee Williams, of course!
"Muky became the Mathew Brady of New York's movie panorama, of neo-realism transplanted from postwar Europe."
- Charles Strum
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Remembering Jesse Winchester on his birthday 🎂
📷 Chris Felver, New Orleans, 2011
"His songs were rooted in country, soul & gospel, & they strove to stay plain-spoken & succinct, whether he was singing wryly about everyday life or musing on philosophy & faith."
- Jon Pareles
Jesse Winchester was opposed to the Vietnam War, & moved to Canada in 1967 to avoid the draft. His first album, from 1970, was produced by Robbie Robertson.
The wonderful cover portrait is by Jeremy Taylor.
"The Brand New Tennessee Waltz":
My favourite Jesse Winchester album has a great Canadian title: Third Down, 110 Yards to Go, from 1972 🇨🇦
Great guitar & backup vocals by Amos Garrett. The photos are by Henri Dupond.
"Isn't That So":
Remembering Dennis Hopper on his birthday 🎂
📷 Aaron Rapoport, 1987
"I thought the crazier you behaved, the better artist you would be. And there was a time when I had a lot of energy to display how crazy that was."
In 1961 Dennis Hopper received a Nikon camera from his wife Brooke Hayward for his 25th birthday. So began a lifelong camera obsession for the actor, screenwriter & director.
This tender moment between the two newlyweds begins a thread of Hopper's best photographs.
Remembering Lisa Fonssagrives on her birthday 🎂
📷 Erwin Blumenfeld, 1939
"Weren’t you petrified when you hung off the Eiffel Tower for Blumenfeld?"
"No, I was too young and too strong. I was a dancer & a skier & very athletic."
Fernand Fonssagrives' most famous photograph: Hypnose, 1950s.
The beautiful eyes are those of Lisa Fonssagrives, the beautiful model & artist who was also his wife.
Lisa Fonssagrives's second husband was another photographer: Irving Penn. He took this amazing shot the year after they were married.
La Bahia Palace in Marrakech, 1951
Remembering Gertrude Käsebier on her birthday 🎂
📷 Adolph de Meyer, c. 1900
"Her great contribution was to sweep portraits clean of fustian backdrops and potted palms and raise them to a plane that could be called art."
- Vicki Goldberg
Happy birthday Bill Bruford 🎂
📷 Rob Verhorst
Amsterdam, 1984
In the musical chairs game that was progressive rock, Bill Bruford never lacked a seat. He played drums for three of the greatest groups: Yes, King Crimson & Genesis.
On Bill Bruford's birthday, David Gahr's photo of Yes
Peter Banks, Chris Squire, Jon Anderson, Tony Kaye, Bill Bruford, July 1969
"Looking Around Me", from German TV that same year:
On Bill Bruford's birthday, Michael Putland's Central Park photo of Genesis
Steve Hackett, Phil Collins, Bill Bruford, Mike Rutherford & Tony Banks, 1976
I've always enjoyed Anthony Lane's film criticism in the @NewYorker. His 2002 collection Nobody's Perfect includes lots of his movie reviews, but I was especially impressed with his two long essays on photographers: Walker Evans & Eugène Atget.
"Atget stopped to absorb the detail that others failed to notice, but he couldn't have cared less about seeing the sights. Not once, in almost forty years behind a camera, did he point it at the Eiffel Tower."
- Anthony Lane
📷 Rue Descartes, c. 1898
"All photographers capture light; Walker Evans managed to seal and store it so securely that, like a day remembered as endless, it may never run out."
- Anthony Lane
📷 Young boy with beagle, Cranberry Island, Maine, 1960s