
Vivian maier
Vivian Dorothy Maier was an American street photographer. She mainly photographed on the streets of New York and Chicago. Maier was born on February 1, 1926, in New York, and passed away on April 21, 2009, in Oak Park, Illinois. Maier was a nanny for more than 40 years and produced roughly 150,000 pictures and films. But she rarely shared her work to people. Her photos became public when her stored belongings were auctioned off as payment for storage charges remained overdue in one of the Chicago storage facilities.
Style of work
Vivian Maier often capture scenes of city life — people on the streets, buildings, windows, and reflections. She focused on ordinary moments, exposing people in their everyday, spontaneous surroundings, primarily strangers unaware of the presence of a camera. Her most praised work is for having a deep sense of composition: she used multiple layers, frames, and edges, reflecting surfaces like mirrors and glass, symmetry, and light and shadow interplay to create depth and levels of visual complexity in her photos.
-> Does it look like any other Photographers work? How?
Robert Frank — Maier’s street photographs are similar with Frank’s work, as both photographed everyday life, strangers. Particularly, their photographs are similarly spontaneous, unposed ones, many times showing people outside the mainstream of society.
->Why did artists of this time choose to work this way? how was the culture of the time
At this moment, America was experiencing massive urban and social changes like industrialization, racial issues, and socioeconomic disparities. The majority of photographers tried to capture these alterations and disparities by taking real-world pictures on the streets — and Vivian Maier was one of them. She used to take pictures a lot of poor people, minorities, and elderly, representing those who were usually overlooked by society.
->Are they influenced by FILM, PAINTING, THEATRE or MUSIC
No, she does not seem to have been directly influenced by other art forms. Her style appears to come more from her own life experiences and habits of observation than from any external artistic influence.
“If you really have something to say better to be behind the camera than in front of it.”— Vivian Maier.
I think this quote shows how important Vivian Maier thought it was to observe rather than show herself. She used the camera as a tool for telling the story of the people in her photos. I agree with this because I realized the best way to find out about the moment is to watch silently. This quote inspires me to pay more attention to subtle moments and small details in everyday life. In my photos, I want to focus on storytelling through observation like Vivian Maier.







































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