Diane Arbus was American photography’s bravest detective. Born in 1923 and raised in leafy privilege, the young Arbus spurned the path of bourgeois domesticity and propriety to patrol the outskirts and no-go areas of the demimonde, armed with only a 35-mm. Nikon and a fierce supply of inquisitive nerve. She haunted flea circuses, carnival sideshows, and strip clubs, made nighttime expeditions into Times Square and Coney Island (then at their most dangerous and squalid), and recorded life on the fly on New York City streets. Like so many photographers in the heyday of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Arbus was in pursuit of the “decisive moment,” the chance epiphany. It was when she upgraded from the Nikon to the medium-format Rolleiflex, with its bulkier body, larger negative, and square frame, that she found her true eye, her visual voice. What was revelatory at the time and remains controversial to this day was that Arbus’s subjects were people who had been marginalized, stigmatized, and ostracized by polite society and mainstream culture: giants, dwarfs, circus freaks, homes for the developmentally disabled, nudists, female impersonators with false eyelashes out to here. The classical poise and becalmed clarity of the images, their eerie hold on the viewer—that’s why they’ve endured. This is Scandinavia’s first large-scale retrospective of Diane Arbus. —James Wolcott
The Arts Intel Report
Diane Arbus: Photographs
When
Mar 24 – July 31, 2022
Where
Etc
Diane Arbus, “Puerto Rican woman with a beauty mark,” 1965 © Estate of Diane Arbus.