The Guardian (USA)

‘An enigma, an artist who walked to his own beat’: the everyday sublime of photograph­er Saul Leiter

- Sean O’Hagan

One evening in 1946, Saul Leiter took a train from his native Pittsburgh to New York. Aged 22, he was leaving behind his family and friends as well as the life that had been mapped out for him by his father, an esteemed orthodox rabbi, who had expected his son to follow in his footsteps. “I turned away from everything he believed in and cared about,” Leiter would later say, that decision having caused a rift between them that was never healed.

That youthful act of self-determinat­ion led to a long estrangeme­nt from his family, though his mother secretly kept in touch with him. It also started Leiter on a singular creative journey that would culminate some 60 years later with his belated canonisati­on as one of the most gifted and mysterious photograph­ers of the latter half of the 20th century.

“Saul lost everything when he moved to New York,” says Anne Morin, curator of Saul Leiter: An Unfinished World, a major retrospect­ive of his work that opens soon at the MK Gallery in Milton Keynes. “But, even though he rejected his upbringing, it shaped him as an artist. From the moment he left Pittsburgh, he was someone who did not fit into any community, artistic or otherwise. He lived like a monk in his New York apartment and led an almost clandestin­e creative life, totally uninterest­ed in fame or even recognitio­n.”

In a recently published book, Saul Leiter: The Centennial Retrospect­ive, Leiter sums up his outlook during his long years of obscurity. “I wasn’t ambitious or driven,” he says, matter-offactly. “I don’t admire success the way some people do. I was fortunate to fulfil my ambition to be unsuccessf­ul.”

Like Vivian Maier, the nanny whose secret archive was discovered a few years after her death in 2009, Leiter shot on the streets of Manhattan. Yet while she wandered far and wide, he stayed close to home, never venturing beyond a few blocks’ radius of his apartment on East 10th Street. Unlike William Klein’s frenetic, neon-lit city, or Berenice Abbott’s towering modernist metropolis, Saul Leiter’s New York is an intimately observed world of gesture and detail: luminous, otherworld­ly and oddly tranquil. Streets and buildings are bathed in soft light and warm colours, his use of reflection­s, blur and shadow approachin­g the abstract or dreamlike. People are partially glimpsed in passing cars, or photograph­ed through vertical spaces between buildings or hoardings. Viewed through smeared or steamed-up windows, they sometimes seem like spectral silhouette­s.

He captured the city and its people in all seasons, against brightly painted storefront­s in summer sunlight, and enveloped in snow or partially obscured by rain in the harsh New York winter. Often, his subjects are caught in moments of quiet reverie amid, but apart from, the city’s bustle and hum.

“As a photograph­er, he was never seduced by the idea of New York as the mythical city that never stops,” says Morin. “He was always attuned to the small rather than the big, to the silence rather than the noise. For him, the city revealed itself in the tiny details of everyday life, but he also wanted to somehow peer through the skin of its surface reality to see something else, something ephemeral but full of meaning.”

Leiter’s clandestin­e creative journey began in 1938, aged 15, when he started painting and sketching in his spare time between school studies. The following year, his mother gave him a Detrola camera, igniting his interest in the medium for which he is now best known, but throughout his life he continued painting. His vast archive contains more than 4,000 abstract pieces and geometric landscapes, mostly watercolou­rs. At the Milton Keynes gallery, the full range of his work will be on display: black and white as well as colour images, fashion photograph­s, languorous­ly erotic portraits of his longtime partner, Soames Bantry, a former model, and her beautiful friends, as well as his paintings and painted-over photograph­s.

“I have intentiona­lly mixed everything together rather than arranging the work in different categories,” says Morin. “Leiter did not have the intention to create an oeuvre, but instead he produced all these fragments that continuous­ly grew and came together to form this huge territory – his unfinished world.”

When he arrived in New York as a young man, Leiter slept on park benches before finding a cheap apartment on Perry Street in Greenwich Village. He befriended the abstract expression­ist painter Richard Pousette-Dart, who became a formative influence, alongside the photograph­er Eugene Smith. Throughout this time, Leiter’s aversion to success was already apparent: in the 1950s, he turned down an offer of an exhibition from an important art dealer, Betty Parsons, whose patronage was much sought after by other up-and-coming artists. Later in life, he liked to tell the story of how he was admonished for the smallness of his paintings by the artist Franz Kline, who told him: “If you only worked big, you would be one of the boys.”

Leiter’s temperamen­t was such that he was never going to be one of the boys, but in the late 1950s and throughout the 60s he reluctantl­y became a fashion photograph­er in order to survive, as well as finance his more personal work. The images he created for Harper’s Bazaar and later for British magazines such as Nova and Man About Town are captivatin­g in their quiet subversion, but often seem constraine­d and altogether less atmospheri­c than his personal work. An exception is a striking image made for Nova, in which he posed Bantry on a stretch of urban wastegroun­d alongside a little boy, both of them intently reading comics against a backdrop of derelict houses. It’s wilfully unglamorou­s and downbeat, and prefigures the casual, low-key approach of a generation of young, edgy photograph­ers who came of age in the 1980s.

In the equally mysterious Bantry, Leiter found a soulmate – someone who shared his lack of interest in fame and was also an avid painter. They met in 1958, when she was newly arrived in New York in search of work as a model. For most of their time together they lived in the same building, but in separate apartments, the walls of his work space covered in her oil paintings of flowers and people. “They were two independen­t souls who had no desire to fit in,” says Morin. “They wanted to be creatively free and to embrace life on their own terms. And, they succeeded.” When Bantry died in 2002 they were living together in her apartment, where Leiter remained, surrounded by her work, until his death in 2013, aged 89.

It was on the streets surroundin­g their building that he made the colour photograph­s for which he is now remembered. Their belated discovery challenged the received history of colour photograph­y in America, given that Leiter began experiment­ing with the tonal possibilit­ies of colour two decades before the likes of William Eggleston and Stephen Shore, whose embrace of the same in the early 1970s caused such controvers­y among critics and traditiona­lists.

In the Milton Keynes show, Morin has chosen to give equal prominence to his black and white photograph­s, which, she says, “have all but disappeare­d in the myth of Saul Leiter”.

That myth is as much to do with the wilful nature of his clandestin­e creative life as the quiet audacity of his colour photograph­y. Although his work had fitfully appeared in various group exhibition­s in the 1960 and 70s, Leiter did not have a solo exhibition until 1993, when the Howard Greenberg Gallery in New York featured some of his black and white photograph­s.

It wasn’t until a decade later, though, when the same gallery hosted a show entitled Saul Leiter: Early Color, that his photograph­s really began to garner attention. A book of the same name, his first monograph, was published the following year, when he was 72. It was greeted as revelatory by a photograph­y world taken by surprise by his very existence. “I used to be unknown and that was very restful and pleasurabl­e,” he told the writer Adam Harrison Levy in 2009. “Now I have become known, and people want to interview me.”

In Levy’s essay for Saul Leiter: The Centennial Retrospect­ive, he sees a connection between Leiter’s orthodox Jewish upbringing – he once described himself as a “rabbinical ghost” – and his quietly inquiring approach to photograph­y.

“[Leiter] retained the last vestiges of his Talmudic schooling, where inquiry and the interpreta­tion of texts were taught and fostered. He had absorbed that way of interrogat­ing the world but had transposed it to the visual realm: he saw the streets of New York, and its inhabitant­s, with the narrative insight of a Talmudic scholar. The streets were his text.”

For all the attention he received in the last decade of his life, Leiter remains an enigma, a remarkably selfeffaci­ng artist who walked to his own beat and went out in search of what Morin calls “the incisive moment” every day, on the same few streets, for nigh on 60 years.

“I aspired to be unimportan­t,” he said of his working life as a photograph­er of the everyday sublime. In that, at least, he was unsuccessf­ul.

• Saul Leiter: An Unfinished World is at MK Gallery, Milton Keynes, 17 February-2 June

• Saul Leiter: The Centennial Retrospect­ive by Margit Erb and Michael Parillo is published by Thames & Hudson (£60). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbo­okshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

 ?? ?? Self-portrait with [his sister and first model] Deborah, 1940s. Photograph: © 2023 Saul Leiter Foundation
Self-portrait with [his sister and first model] Deborah, 1940s. Photograph: © 2023 Saul Leiter Foundation
 ?? ?? Untitled, undated. Photograph: © Saul Leiter Foundation
Untitled, undated. Photograph: © Saul Leiter Foundation

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