FOREWORD
It
is said that there is among some primitive tribal people a fear unto loathing
of the camera and its issue - a sense that the lens is the eye of the devil,
the photographer evil's agent, that the negative goes directly into hell's
files, and that being photographed results in the loss of the subject's soul
or, certainly, its diminishment.
If there is validity to this
idea then the photographed subjects of Jack Mitchell's extraordinary Icons
& Idols haven't a shred of soul left for they have been, as the title
of the book suggests, framed, focused, and rendered - with full complicity
- over and over and over, though not often as accurately, as persuasively
as in Jack's portraits.
I put this to you with some authority,
I think, for I have known or know or have met most of the people herein pictured
and am constantly startled how much of the "soul" of each one has
been captured in these photographs, and by this I mean how much each of the
images is precisely the individual I know.
How can Jack Mitchell see with my
eye, how can he let me see, touch, even smell my experiences? Well, simply
enough, he is an amazing artist.
Some of the portraits are more evidently
"posed" than others, usually those of those whose reflected image
has been wisely calculated through the public years - Bernstein, Nevelson,
Sills, and Lansbury, for example - but they are dead on and accurate, and
are, I guess, the poses I have witnessed.
Others of the portraits - my own
favorites - the "warts and all" photographs as I think of them:
Christopher Isherwood, Sam Barber, Virgil Thomson, Erich Leinsdorf, Rudy Nureyev
for example - while they are clearly not candid shots of the unaware, seem
to me to dig even deeper into the subjects, to capture even more of their
essence; perhaps the pose and the person are still unconsciously wedded.
Jack Mitchell is perhaps most famous
for his photographs of dancers, and I have never seen a portrait of a dancer
which captures the power, the grace, the ethereal density of those who perform
that wondrous art more persuasively than the composition of Louis Falco.
This book is a sampling of thirty-five
years of Jack Mitchell's photography. There are very few photographic artists
who have so accurately and humanely witnessed.
Edward
Albee
New
York City
December,
1997
The above is the Foreword for the book Icons & Idols: A Photographer's Chronicle
of the Arts 1960 - 1995. It is reprinted by permission of the author.
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