Three Things I Learned About Photography From Exhibition of Annie Leibovitz's Early Career

Three Things I Learned About Photography From Exhibition of Annie Leibovitz's Early Career

A quick trip into downtown Los Angeles allowed me a closer look at one of my photographic heroes.

Annie Leibovitz is one of the main reasons I am a professional photographer today. She was the photographer that made me (and still makes me) look at her work and simply say, “Wow, how the heck did she do that?”

Her name has been synonymous with photography ever since I was a kid toting around an instant camera from the supermarket. But it was specifically her editorial for Vanity Fair’s March 2007 Hollywood issue that changed the course of my life. Mixing my two greatest passions, classic cinema and my then burgeoning love of photography, the editorial re-imagined contemporary actors into scenes from classic film noir. Lit to invoke the iconic low key style of noir, but still retaining that decidedly Leibovitz aesthetic that left no doubt as to who was behind the camera, the series opened up for me how beautiful images can really be.

We’ve all fallen in love with Leibovitz’s work at various points. For me, it was the celebrity work for Vanity Fair. For many, it was the rock and roll years at Rolling Stone where she covered every important artist from The Rolling Stones to Tina Turner. For many others, it would be the work she did for Vogue, elevating fashion through light and pure artistry. And while I haven’t been to Disneyland since I was in elementary school, the commercial work she’s done for the company, introducing celebrities into the realm of the fairy tale, even makes me wonder about the happiest place on Earth.

Image courtesy of Hauser & Wirth and The Artist

The current exhibit at Hauser & Wirth gallery in Los Angeles, Annie Leibovitz The Early Years, 1970-1983: Archive Project No. 1, isn’t about any of those things. Instead of rehashing Leibovitz’s greatest hits, the exhibition instead has a look at the early days of Leibovitz’s career as she is just getting her feet wet. Beginner or not, it’s pretty clear from the extensive archive that this woman was blessed with extraordinary talent. With or without her legendary lighting style, if you put a camera in her hand she can make magic happen.

The friend I went with, who is also a photographer, said that, after seeing the exhibition, she actually likes some of Leibovitz’s early work more than the more famous images. That’s not a knock on some of the most famous images in photographic history, but rather an acknowledgement of the raw talent on display at a period in the artist’s life when they are more free to explore.

There were several other lessons that stuck out to me that I felt would be instructive to anyone just starting out and yearning to one day be mentioned in the same breath as Leibovitz herself. Here are three of those things.

Talent May Be Given, But Careers Are Earned

Starting by expanding on my last point. It’s clear from the early photographs that Annie Leibovitz was never going to be a “bad” photographer. Her natural eye and sense of composition would rival pretty much any shooter, even at an early age. Much of the early work is pure reportage, long before she had the ability to bring the resources of a major production in to support her efforts. Just a woman and a camera out documenting the world around her in much the same way as you may be doing today.

What gives the exhibition it’s added power, however, is that it lays out Leibovitz’s work chronologically. Starting with that early reportage and ending as she is just slowly making her way into Hollywood portraiture. What you see is not only the development of her talent but also the progression of her career. In other words, she wasn’t born shooting the Hollywood Issue for Vanity Fair. She had to earn it through years and years of creating work. Her skill set and her career developed in parallel until she eventually grew into the master photographer she is today. Practice makes perfect.

Image courtesy of Hauser & Wirth and The Artist

Access Is Queen

One of the things that I am always struck by when visiting photo exhibits is how many times the most iconic images, the prints that sell for the most money, are often just routine in terms of photography. There’s nothing in the lighting or composition that one million and one photographers haven’t thought of on their own and have less famous duplicates of stashed away in a shoebox. Often what separates the lesser known images from the well known isn’t so much the technique as it is the subject.

Now, let me state clearly here for the record that there are absolutely no “routine” images in Leibovitz’s exhibition. My point is only to say that her already terrific images gain even more resonance over time due to the subject matter. Sometimes that subject matter is a celebrity. It’s far more interesting for most people to see a picture of Mick Jagger sleeping than it would be to see a snapshot of your Aunt Ruth in a state of slumber. Other times, the subject matter is interesting because of the intimacy of the story being told.

Lots of Leibovitz’s early work is documentary in nature. Much less major Hollywood editorial portrait shoot, and much more being embedded with a band on a cramped tour bus for weeks on end photographing everything from them on stage to the mundane moments of riding to the next show.

Two particular shots stand out to me. Neither appear to have been lit or staged in any way. Both just snippets of real life captured on film. One is an image of legendary singer Patti Smith, appearing to be in her early twenties, running across her lawn. That’s it. It’s as straightforward as it sounds. But when mounted on a wall next to Patti in full fashion icon mode, you get a more complete picture of both the larger-than-life artist and the very human 20-something year old girl behind the curtain.

Another image is of a young woman, topless except for what appears to be a T-shirt hastily tossed over her to cover her breasts, passed out on a hotel room floor in a pose that suggests she may have fallen asleep in the act of doing something I won’t reference on a family friendly platform. I don’t know exactly what was happening in the shot. But placed in context of other people in the hotel room passing her by without notice, it suggests a very clear view of the hedonistic 24/7 party atmosphere rock and roll is known for. That image, while relatively straightforward from a technical standpoint, tells an epic story about it's lead character and the world she exists in.

And both of those images are only possible because Leibovitz possessed the off camera skills to gain access. Being able to photograph the world’s most famous faces or most important moments begins with you being able to talk yourself into the room in the first place. People don’t just invite you into the most intimate moments of their lives without you having earned their trust. The bigger the subject, the harder it will be to get close to. One of the attributes that set Leibovitz apart was that she didn’t take no for an answer and was able to get herself into position to take the shots that would show off her talent.

Image ©Annie Leibovitz 2012. Used courtesy of Hauser & Wirth and The Artist.

Take More Photographs

Walking through the exhibition of Leibovitz’s early archives, you wouldn’t be alone to find yourself simply overwhelmed by the sheer volume of images. Sure, in the spray and pray digital age, we tend to burn through memory cards like they were going out of style, but in the film days, where every frame was worth its weight in gold, the process of deciding what to photograph was much more deliberate.

Moreover, this was not like when I finally went through some of my early film photography and found multiple pictures of the same random mailbox shot with various filters. Every one of Leibovitz’s images is unique. Every one tells it’s own story. Each can stand alone.

And while this documentary style is not what Leibovitz would eventually become famous for, this early practice and repetition no doubt fed into the powerhouse she would become. There is simply no substitute for putting in the work. No piece of gear you can buy. No tutorial you can watch. No style you can try to emulate.

If you want to be a great shooter, you have to, well, shoot. And shoot a lot. That’s what Leibovitz did. She shot often. She experimented with different subjects and styles. She put the full bounds of her creativity into her work. And, as a result, she’s built one of the most impressive creative careers of all time. I can think of a lot worse role models to have.

The exhibit at Hauser & Wirth gallery ends this week on the 14th of April. So, if you haven’t seen it yet, be sure to check it out before it disappears.  You might just learn a thing or two.

Location:

901 East 3rd Street, Los Angeles CA 90013

Open Tuesday – Sunday, 11 am – 6 pm

Images used with permission

Christopher Malcolm's picture

Christopher Malcolm is a Los Angeles-based lifestyle, fitness, and advertising photographer, director, and cinematographer shooting for clients such as Nike, lululemon, ASICS, and Verizon.

Log in or register to post comments
13 Comments

Word!

Well said!

Early on, I found that I liked low key lighting best and was in complete awe of her renditions. I'd love to see her exhibition. But, LA is way out of my neighborhood. I'm hoping this exhibit travels to a museum (come on Smithsonian) near me.

It is a travelling one since I saw it in the south of France 2 years ago...

The show looks interesting, it ends April 14 so I better hurry! Thanks for the info.

It's articles like this that keep me around. Thank you so much for sharing.

I particularly loved the section on how careers are earned.

I caught the show this week, and agree with pretty much everything you said. Funny enough, even though there are some 4,000 images in this show, I know both images you referenced and stared just a little longer at both as well, and for the same reasons. On one hand just curious about what the backstory was, and in the Patti image thinking the same about this poet turned rocker now probably living an unimaginable life.

Great show. Annie indeed has a gift, but she also definitely put in the work and set the example.

I was just in the area, but did catch the show, wish I had. Leibovitz was a excellent photographer to be sure, but there were others from that time period. Jimmy Lott, John Klieman, Dean Collins, and many others. Leibovitz was a female and that helped get into places, traveling with the Stones helped (drugs didn't), as did being there when Rolling Stone magazine started and shooing for free over very little. There are a few of us that have the same style images from the same places, same time frame. We just went down a different path, she stayed with what she was great at and loved. The world of digital is just the P mode, no talent needed. Let the camera do it and PP it to death. Don't worry I shoot digital also, but moving back to film, it cheaper and you have to watch your shots.

Great read Thanks
Roger J.

It only took 7 post to get the "she had special access" because she is a woman post.

Do you have links to the people that you mentioned, I tried google but came up empty other than Dean Collins, is it the same guy with the lighting demos?

I saw the exhibit and I have to say I was very disappointed. I had the feeling that I was seeing someone’s old shoebox photographs. Many were very poorly printed. I did enjoy the shot of jack Nicholson standing in front of a map. It showcased his ego very well.

I think you sort of were looking at someones shoebox of photos, these were never intended to be exhibited 40 + years later. I missed the show but it there really were 4000 images there will be a lot of "other than the perfect shot" sort of like alternate pics? Outtakes sometimes are interesting too.

Informative section of content about How to use terminal emulator for windows which are required to convert Open SSH keys and to connect to the server over SSH. I just stumbled upon your web site and in accession capital to assert that I get in fact enjoyed account your blog posts. Any way I will be subscribing to your feeds and even achieve your access consistently rapidly. visit the site as well.
https://write.as/putty/

This Blog is so much informative Quick and easy, Etcher lets you flash an operating system image to an SD card or USB flash drive. You will no longer use optical media to install a new operating system.You may also visit my blog at https://adelinaharris.doodlekit.com/blog/entry/11221622/free-etcher-down...