Object Details
Artist
Arnold Newman
Date
1968
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image / sheet: 14 × 11 inches (35.6 × 27.9 cm)
Mat: 20 × 16 inches (50.8 × 40.6 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Gary Davis, Class of 1976
Object
Number
2010.078.062
Throughout his career, Arnold Newman created portraits for a vast array of people, including politic(…)
Throughout his career, Arnold Newman created portraits for a vast array of people, including politicians, artists, musicians, and celebrities. He pioneered and popularized the environmental portrait, in which the photographer places the subject in a carefully controlled yet personalized setting where all objects within the frame reveal and support the individual’s life and work. Newman maintained that his photographs should still interest and excite the viewer even if the subject was unknown or forgotten. He was well aware of the elusive and temporal qualities of fame, and was more intrigued by what caused it and what his subjects did with their lives. One such example was Margaret Leighton, an award-winning English actress once well known in both America and Europe. Now largely forgotten, Leighton’s persona is preserved within Newman’s photograph. Sitting upright in sumptuous clothing, she occupies much of the frame, her elegance and grandeur immortalized. Arnold Newman collaborated with his subjects to capture their essence and sense of self, proactively shaping their image and legacy—and his own. (“15 Minutes: Exposing Dimensions of Fame,” curated by undergraduate members of Cornell’s History of Art Major’s Society and presented at the Johnson Museum April 16 – July 24, 2016)