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Street Photographer
New York, 10 September 1955 © Vivian Maier/Maloof Collection / Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery New York

Vivian Maier »

Street Photographer

Exhibition: 7 Nov 2014 – 28 Jan 2015

foam

Keizersgracht 609
1017 DS Amsterdam
Sat-Wed 10-18 . Thu, Fri 10-21

Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam

Keizersgracht 609
1017 DS Amsterdam

+31 (0)20-5516500


www.foam.org

Mon-Wed 10-18; Thu-Fri 10-21; Sat-Sun 10-18

Street Photographer
New York, NY, n.d. © Vivian Maier/Maloof Collection / Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York

Vivian Maier, Street Photographer is a retrospective exhibition featuring the work of a female street photographer whose impressive oeuvre was only discovered at the end of her life – and then immediately caused a worldwide sensation. Vivian Maier (New York, 1926 – 2009) worked as a professional nanny throughout her life. In her free time, she documented life in large American cities such as New York and Chicago, although no one in her immediate circle ever saw the results. She left behind an imposing body of work, consisting of 100,000 negatives. Its quality can be compared to that of famed contemporaries like Joel Sternfeld, Joel Meyerowitz, Elliot Erwitt and Garry Winogrand. Besides photos, she also made countless motion pictures and audio recordings. The exhibition at Foam contains photographic work from the 1950s to 1980s in both black-and-white and colour, as well as films.

Vivian Maier, born in the US to a French mother and Austrian father, had a solitary nature. She lost both of her parents early on, so she was forced to become independent at a young age. In 1951 she became a nanny, work she continued to do for the rest of her life. Those who were acquainted with her characterised Maier as extremely intelligent, eccentric, curious and a free spirit. She documented all that caught her attention, in photos as well as sound and motion pictures. On the street she was fairly inconspicuous: she wore a hat, a long dress, a woollen coat and men’s shoes, and she never left the house without a camera around her neck.

She remained single all her life and had no children of her own, but she cared for the children she was looking after like they where her own. The Gensburg’s, a well-to-do Chicago family, who she moved in with in 1956, gave Maier her own bathroom, which became her first darkroom. Her photographic work, at first predominately black-and-white, focused on societal subjects: street life, the disadvantaged and emigrants. After the children grew up, in the 1970s, Maier was forced to seek work with other families. She was then no longer able to develop her own film and her exposed film rolls began to pile up. During that time Maier experimented with colour film, which caused a new approach in her photography and led to more abstraction.

Street Photographer
Untitled, 1953 © Vivian Maier/Maloof Collection / Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York

In the 1980s she was again confronted with developments that made her photography more difficult. Financial problems and the lack of a fixed address caused her film rolls to pile up even more. Sometime in the late 1990s, Maier put down her camera for good and her possessions were placed in storage while she tried to keep her head above water. The Glensburg children arranged a small studio for her, saving her from becoming homeless. The photo archive fell into oblivion, however, until it was finally auctioned off for non-payment in 2007. The archive was sold in multiple lots to various parties and John Maloof came to possess a great deal of the work. Only after he had the work further investigated did its remarkable quality become apparent. The Vivian Maier, Street Photographer exhibition is based on the material that John Maloof came to own.

In 2008 Maier suffered a nasty fall on the ice in Chicago and died in April 2009. She left behind an immense photographic archive.
This exhibition has been made possible in cooperation with diChroma Photography.

Street Photographer
New York, NY, 1953 © Vivian Maier/Maloof Collection / Courtesy Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York