13 August 25

Painting In Kodachrome

An vertical format photo of a city street scene shot at dusk through a window with raindrops on it. The image is blurry except for the raindrops, and dark in value accented in reds and yellows. Through a reflection a traffic light and a woman in high heels is in focus on the right edge of the frame. I have recently become acquainted with the photography of Saul Leiter, and am awestruck by his work. It is the most painterly color photography I have run across, and it is not surprising that he was also a painter.

Saul Leiter was born in Pittsburgh in 1923 and was descended from a line of rabbis, his father being a prominent Talmud scholar. Saul’s father wanted him to be a rabbi too, and Saul dutifully went to seminary in Cleveland for a bit, but then dropped out and moved to New York at the age of 23 to try to become a painter. Friends of his encouraged him to take up photography, and he developed a career as a fashion photographer, working mostly in black-and-white. His color work was a private hobby which started in the late 1940s and largely carried out in the neighborhood in New York where he settled in the 1950s and lived the rest of his life. But his color photography started to attract some attention in the 1990s, and in 2006 a book of his early work was published, entitled Saul Leiter Early Color. After that book was published many people got interested in his work, though Saul was quite humble and never comfortable with fame.

Saul died in 2013, and in 2014 friends of his set up the Saul Leiter Foundation to preserve his art and legacy. The photo at right was taken by him in 1958 on a walk in New York. Saul loved working with reflections and windows and raindrops: in a documentary about him completed in 2012 Saul remarked that “a window covered with raindrops interests me more than a photograph of a famous person.”

Posted by at 04:26 PM in Design Arts | Link |

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