Richard Corman | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1954 (age 70–71) New York City |
| Alma mater | Hunter College |
| Occupation | Photographer |
| Years active | 1981–present |
| Mother | Cis Corman |
| Website | richardcorman |
Richard Corman (born 1954) [1] is an American photographer, best known for his work as a portrait photographer. His subjects include musicians, actors, athletes, artists, writers and humanitarians. His 2013 book, Madonna NYC 83, is a collection of photos he took of a pre-fame Madonna in 1983.
Corman was born and raised in New York City. [2] For his high school years, Corman attended boarding school at Berwick Academy (Maine). [3] After graduating from Hunter College with a degree in art history and psychology, [4] he initially planned on having a career in psychology, before turning to photography. [5] He started out shooting film with a Rolleiflex camera, before ultimately moving on to digital cameras. [5] [6]
In May 1983, Corman, then 29, had just finished a two-year apprenticeship with photographer Richard Avedon. [1] [7] [8] Corman's mother, Cis Corman, was working as a casting director on the Martin Scorsese film The Last Temptation of Christ . Madonna, then 24, auditioned for the role of the Mary Magdalene, and although she did not get the part, Corman's mother suggested that he photographer her. [9] [10] Soon after, Corman took candid photographs of Madonna in and around her apartment in Manhattan's Lower East Side. [11] [12] This was prior to the release of her first album. [10] In the photos, Madonna is dressed in a street fashion of ripped denim, lace and layered jewelry, with a bare midriff. [7] Over the course of 1983, Corman had six shoots with Madonna. [5]
30 years later, in 2013, the resulting photos were published in a coffee table book, Madonna NYC 83. [9] [10] In November 2013, the photos were exhibited for the first time at Milk Gallery in Manhattan, [13] and then at LabArtGalleryLA in Los Angeles, California, in 2014. [14] The photos were also on display in Madonna: A Transformational Exhibition, a traveling global multimedia tour sponsored by the W Hotel. [11] [12] [15] The installation presented the Madonna photos by Corman alongside Alec Monopoly's graffiti art. [12] [15]
Corman's first collection, Glory: Photographs of Athletes, was published in 1999. The black-and-white photos include portraits of Muhammad Ali, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Cal Ripken Jr., and Pat Riley, along with portraits of Special Olympics athletes, ballet dancers, skateboarders and bike messengers. [16] [17]
Since 1991, Corman has documented intellectually disabled athletes in the Special Olympics all over the world, including Cape Town, South Africa in 2001, [6] and Beijing, China in 2007. [2] In 2003, these photos were collected in a book, I Am Proud: The Athletes of Special Olympics. [2] [5] He is creating a campaign for the 2015 Los Angeles Special Olympics Summer World Games in collaboration with artist Mr. Brainwash. [5]
Corman has taken portraits of a breadth of subjects, including Bill Clinton, Robert De Niro, Paul Newman, Al Pacino, Martin Scorsese, Muhammad Ali, Kurt Vonnegut, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Isamu Noguchi, Ralph Lauren, James Dewey Watson and Elie Wiesel. [2] [5] [6] In Manhattan in the early 1980s, Corman took portraits of musicians Boy George and Johnny Rotten, and artists Basquiat and Keith Haring, before they were famous. [1] [5] [8] In 2001, while in Cape Town, Corman photographed President Nelson Mandela visiting his old jail cell. [6] He photographed Philip Seymour Hoffman in character as Truman Capote for the 2005 film Capote , in the style that Richard Avedon shot Capote in the 1960s, which became the image used for the film's poster. [5]
Corman's photos have appeared in a variety of magazines, including Vanity Fair , Vogue , Sports Illustrated , Architectural Digest and Men's Health . [2] [5] [18] [19] He shot Talking Heads for a January 1987 Rolling Stone cover story. [12]
In May 2014, someone placed a Mason & Hamlin baby grand piano underneath the Brooklyn Bridge, and Corman photographed it, using it as a prop for shoots, including a series of images with ballerina Misty Copeland. The piano's appearance under the bridge inspired his 2014 Sunrise Under the Brooklyn Bridge series. [20]
Corman lives in Manhattan with his wife and son. [4]