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Nick of London's video: The Photographs Of Vivian Maier Street Photographer - 1080p

@The Photographs Of Vivian Maier Street Photographer - 1080p
Vivian Maier (1926-2009) had a talent for seeing. As she walked down the street, she not only avoided bumping into people and objects, she actually saw them in a way most people do not; she saw them in their particularity. Maier's talent is recognized immediately by those who view her work, something she let no one do in her lifetime. Maier was a nanny. Born in New York, her father left the family by the time she was 4, and she spent most of her youth growing up in her mother's native France. At some point she acquired a Kodak Brownie, a very cheap box camera, and began taking pictures. In 1951 she returned to New York with the French accent that never abandoned her. How she maintained herself is uncertain, but several of the pictures now on display at the Greenberg and Kasher galleries were taken in New York over the next five years with a Rolleiflex, the professional 2¼-by-2¼-inch twin-lens reflex she was to use for several decades. Whether Maier studied photography is not known, but her remarkable talent for street photography was evident. By 1956 she was in Chicago where, except for a few vacations, she spent the rest of her life. And there she worked from 1956 to 1972 for Avron and Nancy Gensburg, taking care of their three boys: John, Lane and Matthew. Maier continued to work as a nanny or caretaker until she retired sometime in the 1990s. Ms.Gensburg says, "She really wasn't interested in being a nanny at all, but she didn't know how to do anything else." Not all of those employers who have been identified were enamored of her—she was very opinionated and could be rude, but the Gensburg boys adored her. "She was like Mary Poppins" Lane Gensburg says. The boys were delighted when she brought home a dead snake for them to inspect, or took them to see art films, or the Chinese New Year parade, or a favourite, hunted wild strawberries with them in a nearby forest. On her days off she set out alone (she seems to have had no friends) with her camera dangling around her neck. In 1987, when she interviewed for a job in Glenview, with Zalman and Karen Usiskin, Maier told them, "I come with my life, and my life is in boxes." When she showed up to begin work she brought 200 boxes. Some of the boxes held her negatives and photographic equipment, but many of them held newspapers and magazines, which she read voraciously and could not bear to part with. Most of that stuff was in storage lockers when the Gensburg brothers found her living in a cheap apartment in Cicero, ill, in the late 1990s, they moved her to a nice apartment in Rogers Park and continued to look after her. In December 2008, she slipped on some ice, hit her head, and was taken to the emergency room; the Gensburgs saw she had the best doctors. In spite of their solicitous care, Maier died on April 20, 2009. Meanwhile, the rent on the storage lockers had gone unpaid, and their contents were put up for sale. In 2007, John Maloof, a young real-estate agent, bought one of the boxes for $400 because there was a picture of the Loop in it he thought he could use for a book he was writing. Mr. Maloof knew nothing about art photography, but as he went through the 30,000 images in the box he got interested, and educated himself. He tracked down people who had bought other boxes and picked them up. But whose pictures were they? Finally, in April 2009, he found deep in one of the boxes an envelope from a photo lab with "Vivian Maier" penciled on it. A Google search turned up the death notice the Gensburgs had placed in the Chicago Tribune a few days before: "Vivian Maier... Second mother to John, Lane & Matthew". There are still tens of thousands of negatives that have not been scanned, and thousands of rolls of film that were never developed. So, since Maier made very few prints the full extent of her work is unknown. But it is vast, and the best of it is remarkable. She also took many self-portaits, as if checking on her own identity.Because she used a medium-format Rollei rather than a 35mm camera, Maier's pictures have more detail than those of most street photographers. Like them, though, her main subject is people she encountered on her outings. Her compositions tend to be straightforward. There are many children and many women, women both young and fashionable and old and haggard. She also photographed down-and-outs, sometimes crumpled on the sidewalk. There are many, many self-portraits in many ingenious permutations. But the real mystery is this: Why didn't Vivian Maier show anyone her pictures? Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purpose such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use.

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This video was published on 2013-08-07 07:34:43 GMT by @Nick-of-London on Youtube. Nick of London has total 5.2K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 32 video.This video has received 146 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Nick of London gets . @Nick-of-London receives an average views of 85.5K per video on Youtube.This video has received 0 comments which are lower than the average comments that Nick of London gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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