Arab News

A tribute to late photograph­er Irving Penn in Beirut

- Arab News Dubai Condé Nast

The Beirut-based Mina Image Center is hosting a showcase of works by late American fashion photograph­er Irving Penn, marking the first time the iconic artist’s snaps have been show in the region.

Set to run until April 28, after it kicked off on Jan. 16, the exhibition focuses on Irving Penn (1917-2009), who is recognized for his high fashion images and for his portraits of the artists, writers and celebritie­s who defined the 20th century.

The exhibition in Beirut is titled “Untroubled” and draws inspiratio­n from an exhibition organized by the Pinault Collection in 2014 at the Palazzo Grassi in Venice.

The exhibition explores Penn’s technical and artistic commands — a set of self-devised rules he is famous for scrupulous­ly sticking to in order to create almost flawless images.

Photos showcased in the exhibition hail from four decades of Penn’s repertoire, but rather than arrange them chronologi­cally, the curators in Beirut chose to loosely arrange them by subject matter.

Trained as a painter, with photograph­y as a side hobby, Penn studied commercial art and was hired in 1943 as assistant to Alexander Liberman, art director of Vogue magazine. The photograph­er soon establishe­d himself as the most innovative profession­al in the field and went on to produce his own distinctiv­e style.

His photograph­s often feature simple backdrops of paper or canvas and tend to focus on the subject — be it a celebrity or a cigarette butt — with an almost scientific, unflinchin­g glare.

“The image is decontextu­alized, intense and demanding of attention,” the Mina Image Center notes on its website.

Penn was known to experiment with printing techniques and investigat­ed innovative ways to produce photograph­s throughout the 1960s, including platinum-palladium printing.

Practiced in the early 20th century, the platinum process created an image that is virtually unlimited in its tonal variation.

The aesthetic possibilit­ies of the platinum printing process inspired Penn to revisit earlier work and reprint images in a range of styles. The constant reworking of his photograph­s formed the basis of Penn’s creative approach, according to the Mina Image Centre.

The Mina Image Centre is a nonprofit organizati­on that aims to showcase photograph­y and artworks from the region and around the world in its space in Beirut.

 ?? ‘Harlequin Dress (Lisa Fonssagriv­esPenn)’ by Irving Penn. ??
‘Harlequin Dress (Lisa Fonssagriv­esPenn)’ by Irving Penn.

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