GARY BEEBER | |
---|---|
Occupation | Photographer |
Notable work | Dirty Martini and the New Burlesque (Feature Film) |
Gary Beeber (born 1951) is an American photographer and filmmaker. [1]
Gary Beeber grew up in suburban Ohio. [2] When he was 12 years-old, he parents bought him his first camera. [3] He attended Miami University's College of Art, where he "focused on learning drawing and painting technique; egg tempera, watercolor, oil," [2] graduating in 1971. [4] Next, he moved to New York City, where he studied at the School of Visual Arts and took courses with R. O. Blechman and Charlie Slackman. [2] In New York City, he worked as an exhibit designer at The Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum and other galleries and exhibition spaces. [5] In the early 1990s, moved to Southampton (village), New York, where he met the photographer Jay Hoops. [6] After Hoops' death in 2004, he obtained a collection of her Polaroids from her estate, which formed the subject of an exhibition that he co-curated at the Galleries at Wright State University in 2022. [7] [6] In 2017, he moved from Long Island to southern Ohio. [8]
Beeber began his professional career in photorealistic watercolors, mostly using his camera to make reference photographs of subjects. He eventually abandoned painting altogether for photography. [9] He has taken photographs in Italy, Morocco, German, and the United States, with subjects ranging from somber spaces of death, through deteriorating objects, architectural details, plants, portraits, and rituals, to the exuberant figures of neo-burlesque. [10]
Beeber filmed and produced the 2010 feature-length documentary Dirty Martini and the New Burlesque, which won the Best Documentary Feature Award at the 2010 Coney Island Film Festival and was an Official Selection of the 2010 USA Film Festival. [11] [12] From 2011 to 2014, he produced a neo-burlesque show, Gotham Burlesque, on the Upper West Side. [13]
Beeber has had many solo photography and juried exhibitions and a number of large companies, including Pfizer Pharmaceutical, Goldman Sachs, and Chase Bank have purchased his work. His work is held in permanent collections in Tennessee, Ohio, Massachusetts, Florida, and New York. [14]
Diane Arbus was an American photographer. She photographed a wide range of subjects including strippers, carnival performers, nudists, people with dwarfism, children, mothers, couples, elderly people, and middle-class families. She photographed her subjects in familiar settings: their homes, on the street, in the workplace, in the park. "She is noted for expanding notions of acceptable subject matter and violates canons of the appropriate distance between photographer and subject. By befriending, not objectifying her subjects, she was able to capture in her work a rare psychological intensity." In his 2003 New York Times Magazine article, "Arbus Reconsidered", Arthur Lubow states, "She was fascinated by people who were visibly creating their own identities—cross-dressers, nudists, sideshow performers, tattooed men, the nouveaux riches, the movie-star fans—and by those who were trapped in a uniform that no longer provided any security or comfort." Michael Kimmelman writes in his review of the exhibition Diane Arbus Revelations, that her work "transformed the art of photography ". Arbus's imagery helped to normalize marginalized groups and highlight the importance of proper representation of all people.
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Samuel Herman Gottscho was an American architectural, landscape, and nature photographer.
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Harold Martin Feinstein was an American photographer.
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Lou Bernstein was an American photographer and teacher. His career began during the Great Depression and the Photo League and ended shortly before he died.
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Harry Lapow was an American photographer and graphic designer.
Jay Hoops was an American photographer.