Vivian Maier: Self-Portraits and its Double. Exhibition at the Finnish Museum of Photography
Vivian Maier (1926-2009) worked in the early 1950s and, for over forty years after that, as a nanny in New York and then in Chicago.
Her entire life was spent in anonymity until 2007 when her photographic corpus came to light. It was a huge and impressive body of work, consisting of more than 120,000 negatives, super 8 and 16mm films, various audio recordings, a few photographs, and hundreds of undeveloped rolls of film. Her all-consuming hobby ended up making her one of the most acclaimed proponents of street photography and, in Photography History, she ranks alongside Diane Arbus, Robert Frank, Helen Levitt, and Garry Winogrand.
The eleventh-hour discovery of Vivian Maier’s work, which could so easily have disappeared or even been destroyed, was almost a contradiction. It brought about a complete reversal of her destiny because, thanks to that find, a “mere” nanny succeeded in becoming, posthumously, Vivian Maier – Vivian Maier the photographer.
Throughout her work, there are recurring themes: street scenes, portraits of anonymous strangers and people with whom she may have identified, the world of children – which was her own world for so long –, and also a fondness for self-portraits. These abound in Vivian Maier’s work, appearing in a multitude of forms and variations – to the point of almost being a language within her language. A duality.
Unlike Narcissus, who destroyed himself in the contemplation and admiration of his own image, Vivian Maier´s interest in the self-portrait was more like a desperate quest for her identity. Reduced to invisibility, to a kind of non-existence, because of the social status of her position, she quietly and unobtrusively set about producing irrefutable proof of her presence in a world in which she seemed to have no place.
Reflections of her face in a mirror, or in an infinite regress, or her shadow stretching out on the ground, or the outline of her figure: every self-portrait by Vivian Maier is an assertion of her presence in that particular place, at that particular time.
The recurring feature that became a signature in her self-portraits, as it also did in Lee Friedlander´s, was the shadow. The shadow, that silhouette whose defining property is its attachment to the body, that duplicate of the body in negative, ” carved out of reality”, has the ability to render that which is absent present.
For although the shadow attests to the existence of a referent, it simultaneously obliterates its presence. Within this duality, Vivian Maier juggled with a self on the verge of disappearance, and the appearance of her double, recognizing perhaps that a self-portrait is “a presence in the third person (which) indicates the simultaneity of that presence and its absence.
And since a photograph, as Edouard Boubat said, is “something snatched from life”, in Vivian Maier’s case, her accumulated self-portraits amount to a configuration of her identity, an identity that has now taken its place in a perpetual present, constantly repeated and under the seal of History. (Anne Morin, Curator)
The exhibition at the Finnish Museum of Photography in Helsinki is produced in collaboration with diChroma photography.
More info on:
https://www.valokuvataiteenmuseo.fi/en
https://www.dichroma-photography.com/
http://www.vivianmaier.com/
VIVIAN MAIER: Self-portraits and its Double
The Finnish Museum of Photography- Helsinki, Finland
January 16 – May 3, 2020