Photo de l'auteur

Lee Miller (1) (1907–1977)

Auteur de Les vies de Lee Miller

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Lee Miller, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

13+ oeuvres 429 utilisateurs 5 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Lee Miller (1)

Œuvres de Lee Miller

Les vies de Lee Miller (1985) — Photographe — 158 exemplaires
Lee Miller (2007) — Photographe — 93 exemplaires
Lee Miller: Portraits from a Life (2002) — Photographe — 82 exemplaires
Lee Miller Photographer (1750) 37 exemplaires
Lee Miller Portraits (2005) — Photographe — 16 exemplaires
Grim Glory; Pictures of Britain under Fire (1941) — Photographe — 9 exemplaires
Wrens in camera (1945) 8 exemplaires
Lee Miller in Sussex 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Miró's magic animals (2016) — Photographe — 16 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
MILLER, Elizabeth
Lady PENROSE,
MILLER, Lee
Date de naissance
1907-04-23
Date de décès
1977-07-21
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Poughkeepsie, New York, USA
Lieu du décès
Chiddingly, East Sussex, England, UK
Lieux de résidence
Paris, France
Cairo, Egypt
Hampstead, London, England, UK
Sussex, England, UK
New York, New York, USA
Professions
photographer
model
war correspondent
Relations
Penrose, Roland (second spouse)
Penrose, Antony (son)
Ray, Man (teacher; lover)
Steichen, Edward (employer)
Picasso, Pablo (employer)
Organisations
Life magazine
Condé Nast
Vogue
Courte biographie
From The New York Times: In the 1920s, Elizabeth "Lee" Miller's cool, sexually liberated flapper visage was everywhere. On the cover of Vogue and in other publications, her blond bob gleamed like the golden helmet of a gin-alley goddess. It was while modeling for Edward Steichen that Miller began to learn the basics of photography, and found herself inspired to move behind the camera. In the 1930s, she plunged into the Montparnasse art scene, appearing in Jean Cocteau's film "The Blood of a Poet," sitting for Pablo Picasso's portraits of Provençal wenches, and, most fortunately, after presenting herself to Man Ray as his protégée, becoming his lover, muse and eventual collaborator.

She became a Surrealist photographer herself who worked with and was friends with a wide number of major artists of her time including Henry Moore, Eileen Agar, Jean Dubuffet, Dorothea Tanning, Max Ernst, and Paul Éluard, besides Picasso and Cocteau. Lee Miller was one of the most extraordinary photographers of the 20th century, famous for her portraits and devastating photographs of World War II, as well as for her legendary beauty. As an intrepid photojournalist, she was among the first to document the liberation of Nazi concentration camps. An art student and a "Vogue" model, she was a close friend of artists such as Picasso, Cocteau, Max Ernst and Paul Eluard, and became a muse of Man Ray and the Parisian surrealists. She married the English historian and modern art collector Sir Roland Penrose in 1947 and they bought Farley Farm in East Sussex, where some of her works are still exhibited.

Membres

Critiques

Highly readable and thoroughly enjoyable .Maybe one of the most incredible characters I’ve ever read or learnt about, unapologetically unreasonable and free, I love Lee.
 
Signalé
Ziggy22 | Nov 24, 2023 |
Lee Miller was a beautiful woman. She spent a great deal of time in front of the camera, first as a model for her father and then as a muse for countless others. But it is Miller's work behind the camera that is the most captivating. There is no doubt in my mind she was ahead of her time as photographer. She liked to take chances. This is especially apparent when she went to Germany to photo-journal the events of World War II. For a woman to be in the thick of it is one thing. Hundreds of women contributed to the war effort by being nurses and so forth. But for a woman to capture the haunting and often disturbing pictures that Miller did, it's quite another. She oscillated between tongue-in-cheek and shocking. Her photography gently fanned over the ruins of burnt out buildings, horrific operations and ladies' fashions. "Remington Silent" is one of my favorites if for nothing more than the subliminal message Miller sends. Her expose in Vogue (New York, 1945) screams absurdity as she compares German children to the burned bones of prisoners...
However, I feel this need to surprise has always been there (find the picture of the severed breast from a radical mastectomy to see what I mean). Even in her portraits Miller had the ability to send mixed messages.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
SeriousGrace | Mar 25, 2015 |
Miller has an fascinating view and an "unflinching eye". This stance she keeps during her whole photographic career, which encompass three decades. As she says 'there were lots of things, touching, poignant or queer I wanted to photograph'. Lee Miller is first of all an artist photographer and second a documentary photographer. Despite this, I am most impressed by the pictures she made during the second worldwar. First the effect of the Blitz on London and its citizens. In 1942 she applied and was accepted by the US army as war correspondent. She documented in Britain the war work of women. And in 1944 she flew to Normandy to cover the Allied advance through France and Germany. She focussed first of all on the human stories. In 1945 she photographed the Nazi war crimes and she kept on taking pictures of war devastations till the beginning of 1946. She had few illusions of the liberation: 'the pattern of liberation is not decorative', she wrote,' ... There is the beautiful overall colour of freedom but there is ruin and destruction.' In 1949 she and Roland Penrose started a artist home in Farley Farm in East Sussex. Miller began to work as a portraitist. At the start of her career, she was trained as an artist in the surrealist way of thinking. Cinema was very important for her sensibility. She saw in cinema a flash of poetry and this she caught in her work. In the introduction Richard Calvocoressi comments the fact that Miller's critics detect a loss of intensy in her photographs of the 1950s and 1960s. He disagrees on that. Some postwar portraits belong to her highest achievements. But it is true that she was burnt out by the war and was finished with her assignments with Vogue. He mentions her last photo serie 'Working Guests' in Vogue of 1953. Her she pictures her artist friends at work at Farly Farm, while she is seen sleeping on the drawing-room sofa. She liberated herself again to do what she liked.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
timswings | 1 autre critique | Jan 15, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
13
Aussi par
1
Membres
429
Popularité
#56,934
Évaluation
4.2
Critiques
5
ISBN
51
Langues
3
Favoris
1

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