A 1972 retrospective of Diane Arbus’s work, mounted at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) just one year after she took her own life, divided viewers the way few exhibitions ever have. New York Times ...
‘Diane Arbus:Sanctum Sanctorum’ at David Zwirner is an honest exhibition. The photos dazzle and discombobulate but they do not lie. Instead, they paint a piercing portrait of human nature. Full of ...
Diane Arbus’ influence on modern and contemporary photography is unparalleled. Known largely for her images of freaks and geeks, a current exhibit at Fraenkel Gallery shows Arbus at her best, and her ...
Five Diane Arbus Photographs to Go on Public Display for First Time The photographs will appear at the David Zwirner Gallery in New York in November as a part of the first complete presentation of ...
The first big New York art show this season, at the David Zwirner gallery in Chelsea, is “Cataclysm,” an exhibit of Diane Arbus photographs—a recreation of the Museum of Modern Art’s wildly ...
This image was featured in the first retrospective of works by Diane Arbus at The Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1972, and was also included in the accompanying book. Please complete all fields.
In celebration of Artnet’s Important Photographs sale, we asked three of our specialists to tell us about three groundbreaking female photographers—Diane Arbus, Lisette Model, and Cindy Sherman—and ...
Talk about prescient. When the good folks at Girls’ Club gallery opened “Re-Framing the Feminine” last November, little did they know that within months, presidential politics would suddenly live up ...
It’s a nightmare for politicians too. We can see why they learn to keep beaming with confidence no matter what is happening, because if anything goes wrong, the editors will be scouring the files for ...
A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955. By M.H. Miller, Brendan Embser, Emmanuel Iduma and Lucy McKeon The Times’s clippings library, ...