Customer Reviews:
Biographical Notes, Technical Insights, and Inspiration . . . Portrayed on a Too Small Page November 29, 2008 Donald Mitchell (Boston) 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Any fan of Annie Leibovitz will want to read and cherish this book. The words and images will mean the most to young people dreaming of having a career in photography who wonder about how she got started. Annie Leibovitz's photography has surrounded and informed us for so long that it has become part of the landscape, perspectives that we employ and too often take for granted. In Annie Leibovitz at Work, she takes us behind the camera a little to understand her motivations, her family, her career, her assignments, her purposes, and how those iconic images were constructed. I enjoyed the book very much but I found that it had two flaws that bothered me: She is a usually little too coy in holding back details that her disclosures make enticing. The page sizes are too small to properly display the images. The print quality is excellent, but you can only do so much when images intended for full magazine pages or portraits are displayed in 3 inch by 5 inch formats. A minor weakness is that some of the images she talks about aren't portrayed (presumably either a space or a permissions problem, but it is disappointing whenever it happens). Here are some of the poignant stories in the book: 1. Taking the last portrait of John Lennon and Yoko Ono before John was murdered. 2. Photographing the Rolling Stones on tour while trying to keep a nervous independence from the parties and the crush of fans at the end of a concert. 3. John Cleese nearly suffocating to get the picture of pretending to be a bat hanging from a tree. 4. Capturing Al Sharpton at the beauty parlor. 5. Arnold Schwarzenegger changing his image through her photographs. 6. The story behind the pregnant cover of Demi Moore. 7. Cindy Sherman wanting to disappear in her portrait. 8. Capturing the war in Sarajevo. 9. The slaughter in Rwanda. 10. Posing OJ during his LA trial. 11. The arrogant photograph of the new White House team in town (December 2001). 12. Philip Johnson and his glass house. 13. Agnes Martin 14. Queen Elizabeth Of the technical details, I was most interested in her descriptions of how she put together multiple shots to appear as one image. Here are some of the many iconic images in the book: Richard Nixon leaving the White House, Washington, D.C., 1974 Hunter S. Thompson and George McGovern, San Francisco, 1972 Tom Wolfe, Florida, 1972 Apollo 17, the last moon shot, Cape Kennedy, Florida, 1972 The Rolling Stones, Philadelphia, 1975 Keith Richards, Toronto, 1977 Mick Jagger, Chicago, 1975 Mick Jagger, Buffalo, New York, 1975 John Lennon, New York City, 1970 John Lennon and Yoko Ono, New York City, December 8, 1980 Tess Gallagher, Syracuse, New York, 1980 Robert Penn Warren, Fairfield, Connecticut, 1980 Bette Midler, New York City, 1979 Meryl Streep, New York City, 1981 The Blues Brothers (Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi), Hollywood, 1979 Steve Martin, Beverly Hills, 1981 Whoopi Goldberg, Berkeley, California 1984 Keith Haring, New York City, 1986 John Cleese, London, 1980 Andree Putnam, New York City, 1989 William Wegman and Fay Ray, New York City, 1988 Evander Holyfield, New York City, 1992 Willie Shoemaker and Wilt Chamberlain, Malibu, California, 1987 The Reverend Al Sharpton, PrimaDonna Beauty Care Center, Brooklyn, New York, 1988 Arnold Schwarzenegger, Malibu, California, 1988 Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sun Valley, Idaho, 1997 Mikhail Baryshnikov and Rob Besserer, Cumberland Island, Georgia, 1990 Mark Morris, Cumberland Island, Georgia, 1990 Bruce Willis and Demi Moore, Paducah, Kentucky, 1988 Demi Moore, Culver City, California 1991 Cindy Sherman, New York City, 1992 Carl Lewis, Pearland, Texas, 1996 Sarajevo, 1993 Soccer Field, Sarajevo, 1993 Blood on a mission-school wall, Rwanda, 1994 Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon, Los Angeles, 1995 Patti Smith, New Orleans, 1978 Patti Smith, New York City, 1996 Puff Daddy and Kate Moss, Paris, 1999 Ben Stiller, Paris, 2001 Natalia Vodianova, Stephen Jones, and Christian Lacrois, Paris, 2003 Keira Knightley and Jeff Koons, Goshen, New York, 2005 Kirsten Dunst, Versailles, 2006 Cabinet Room, The White House, Washington, D.C. December 2001 Nicole Kidman, Charleston, East Sussex, England, 1997 Johnny Depp, New York City, 1994 Cate Blanchett, Los Angeles, 2004 Philip Johnson, Glass House, New Canaan, Connecticut, 2000 William S. Burroughs, Lawrence, Kansas, 1995 Agnes Martin, Taos, New Mexico, 1999 Marilyn Leibovitz, Clifton Point, New York, 1997 Sarah Cameron Leibovitz, New York City, 2002 Susan Sontag, Paris, 2003 Sharon Stone, Angelica Huston, and Diane Lane, Los Angeles, 2006 Kirsten Dunst, Bruce Willis, and James McAvoy, Los Angeles, 2006 Judi Dench and Helen Mirren, Los Angeles, 2006 Helen Mirren and Kate Winslet, New York City, 2006 Jack Nicholson, Los Angeles, 2006 Elizabeth II, Buckingham Palace, London, 2007 (4) Hillary Clinton, New York City, 2003 Take a close look and enjoy!
Great book- intresting facts December 21, 2008 A. Luker (Ascot, England) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Really intresting and inspiring information on her recent and not so recent work. Definatly worth buying if you like her work- i bought it as im a photography student. Its useful to know how great photographers of today started out and what they have achieved. Not a large variety of pictures in this book, it is more written therefore if you want bright and bold pictures buy her other book which is also really invaluble and inspiring
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