Lisette Model, the Street Photographer Who Taught Diane Arbus | Artsy (2024)

Visual Culture

Karen Kedmey

Jan 16, 2018 9:28PM

Lisette Model

Lower East Side (man), New York, ca. 1939

Robert Mann Gallery

Lisette Model

Lisette Model, 1940

Galerie Julian Sander

In the summer of 1934, a young woman named Lisette Model took a break from her life in Paris to visit her mother and sister in Nice. While there, she borrowed a 35-millimeter camera from her sister, Olga, and took it to the Promenade des Anglais, an upscale stretch along the Mediterranean seaside that was popular with a moneyed crowd. In the line of Model’s keen (or unforgiving) sight, the men and women lounging in the promenade’s comfortable chairs became so many sitting ducks.

The nascent photographer lifted the camera to her eye and captured them in a series of images that draw out the awkwardness of their well-fed, well-dressed bodies and the fascination of faces modeled by age, which appear almost grotesque, but also striking, even sculptural. “You cannot imagine how fantastically boring it can be to look hour after hour at a beautiful body,” Model once said, referring to a stint studying painting in Paris and working from live models. “But an ugly body can be fascinating.”

Shortly before she tested her photographic acuity in Nice, Model had decided to switch from pursuing a career in music to experimenting with one in photography. Her sister had become enamored with the medium, and together with her friend, Rogi André, she introduced it to Model—who quickly took to it for reasons both practical and personal.

Model had moved to Paris from her native Vienna in 1926 in order to study singing. There, on account of her own Jewish-Catholic roots and the Judaism of her husband, Russian painter Evsa Model, she faced a growing risk as the Nazis consolidated power in Europe. Unlike music, photography seemed to promise a set of broadly applicable, and, crucially, more easily transportable skills. In 1938, with anti-Semitism increasingly virulent and war looming, the Models emigrated to New York City, where they would live for the rest of their lives.

Lisette Model

Sammy's Bar, 1945

Bruce Silverstein Gallery

Lisette ModelConey Island Bather, New York, 1939-1941Keitelman Gallery

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While looking for employment in her new city, Model brought her Promenade des Anglais portraits to the photo editor at a newly established, progressive newspaper called PM. He admired her work, publishing nine of the photographs and introducing her to other professionals in the field. By the early 1940s, she was working as a photographer for Harper’s Bazaar, a job she would keep until 1953. (It was no accident that her association with the publication corresponded with the tenure of art director Alexey Brodovitch, who filled its pages with the work of the most visionary photographers of the day.)

On her first assignment for Harper’s Bazaar, Model went back to the beach. This time, her image-hunting ground was not reserved for the wealthy but was, by contrast, the come-one-come-all coastline of Coney Island. There she found a corpulent woman in a black bathing suit and with a beaming expression that radiated confidence and joyfulness. Model captured this woman—who would become immortalized in her photographs as the Coney Island bather—standing in a high crouch and lying on her side with her head propped up on one arm.

The latter position recalls the voluptuous odalisques that sprang from the heated imaginations of 19th- and early-20th-century European male artists and appeared in their Orientalist paintings. Model cropped her prints to fill the frame with the bather’s form, pushing her right up against the edges and consuming the observer’s view.

The exaggerated closeness of her prints, her unusual, tilting perspectives, and her ability to pick out the most expressive characters wherever she went made Model one of the foremost street photographers of the early to mid-20th century. She shot anonymous figures on the teeming streets of Manhattan’s Lower East Side—among her favorite locations—and in dive bars, hotel lobbies, and numerous other public places. Rich and poor alike were subject to her searching eye, which loved wrinkled, disheveled, fleshy, distinct individuality. “The one I photograph is so strong there can almost never be anyone else,” she said.

Lisette Model

Reflections, 1939-1945

Seraphin Gallery

Lisette Model

Femme au Voile, 1949

Seraphin Gallery

Model’s photographs showed her peers—among them admirers like Ansel Adams and Berenice Abbott—the remarkable visual power of the unexpected angle, the un-beautiful body and face, and the blur and grain of the print. In 1951, she joined the faculty of The New School for Social Research, in Manhattan, where she taught the most sought-after photography course in the city for the next 30 years. The roster of students she influenced includes a who’s who of postwar and contemporary photographers, most famously Diane Arbus.

Model helped Arbus find the confidence to make the photographs she wanted to but was unsure she should: penetrating portraits of people at the fringes of society and those she encountered on the street who, like her teacher’s countless subjects, had an appeal stemming from an exuberant, and sometimes fragile, strangeness.

Model photographed until the end of her life. While she remains recognized for helping to re-shape conceptions of documentary photography in America and for her defining approach to street photography, her work has been eclipsed by that of her contemporary, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and of those born a generation later, especially Arbus, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, and Lee Friedlander.

Model understood that capturing images was a personal pursuit and emphasized that photographers should reveal something of themselves in their work, as she did fearlessly in her own. And like Cartier-Bresson, she laid the ground upon which so many other photographers stand.

Karen Kedmey

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Lisette Model, the Street Photographer Who Taught Diane Arbus | Artsy (2024)

FAQs

Who did Lisette Model teach? ›

Later in life Model turned to teaching, and, to her surprise, discovered she was not only good at it but enjoyed it as well. Her students included Larry Fink, Naomi Rosenblum, and Arbus.

What was Lisette Model known for? ›

As one of the most influential street photographers of the 1940s, Model redefined the concept of documentary photography in America, and through her roles of teacher and lecturer she shaped the direction of postwar photography.

What is the theme of Diane Arbus photography? ›

Her documentary eye and search for personal, inner wealth created the shocking and intriguing images of asylum inmates, midgets, nudists, drug-addicts and transvestites. She sought the adversity of the people on the “fringes of society”.

Who taught Diane Arbus? ›

After taking a brief photography course with Berenice Abbott, Arbus met Lisette Model, an Austrian-born documentary photographer, and studied with her from about 1955 to 1957. With Model's encouragement Arbus gave up commercial work to concentrate on fine-art photography.

Who was the female photographer who photographed her children? ›

American photographer Sally Mann – pictured above – was born on May 1, 1951. Her work has been said to be evocative and controversial mainly because she often documented her children without clothing.

Who came up with Modelling in teaching? ›

Study by Albert Bandura

The concept of behavioral modeling was most memorably introduced by Albert Bandura in his famous 1961 Bobo doll experiment.

Which famous photographer best known for her depression era work including the famous migrant mother image? ›

Dorothea Lange took this photograph in 1936, while employed by the U.S. government's Farm Security Administration (FSA) program, formed during the Great Depression to raise awareness of and provide aid to impoverished farmers.

Who was the female photographer pioneer? ›

As early as the 1870s, Julia Margaret Cameron was a pioneer of the use of soft focus in her depictions of figures from Arthurian legend. Some women opened their own studios, like Ellen Auerbach and Grete Stern, who were innovative figures in the flourishing field of advertising.

Which female photographer was a pioneer in the surrealist movement in photography? ›

In conclusion, Florence Henri was a pioneering surrealist artist who experimented with different techniques to create unique photographic works. Although she was overshadowed by male artists in her time, she is now recognized as one of the pioneers of surrealist photography.

How was Diane Arbus influenced? ›

However, Arbus eventually became disillusioned with the world of fashion photography and sought to create images that were more personal and emotionally resonant. In the late 1950s, she began to study photography under the guidance of influential photographers such as Lisette Model and Alexey Brodovitch.

What is an interesting story about Diane Arbus? ›

At the age of 14 she fell in love with Allan Arbus, the 19-year-old nephew of one of her father's business partners. Her parents disapproved of her infatuation, but the romance flourished in secret. Soon Diane lost interest in painting and in going to college, saying her only ambition was to become Allan's wife.

When did Diane Arbus stop photography? ›

Ultimately, Arbus' personal dissatisfaction with the business led her to quit in 1956 to focus on her art.

What is Diane's most famous photo? ›

The Child with a toy hand grenade in Central Park, N.Y.C (1962) is probably one of the most famous ones. The image is unusual and I would say little disturbing.

Who mentored Diane Arbus? ›

Lisette Model, the Street Photographer Who Taught Diane Arbus | Artsy.

What is the meaning of Arbus? ›

Noun. arbus c. (Finland, dialectal) watermelon.

Who was the nanny photographer discovered? ›

Finding Vivian Maier is the critically acclaimed documentary about a mysterious nanny, who secretly took over 100,000 photographs that were hidden in storage lockers and, discovered decades later, is now among the 20th century's greatest photographers.

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