Sally
Mann (born in Lexington, Virginia, 1951) is one of America’s most
renowned photographers. She has received numerous awards, including
NEA, NEH, and Guggenheim Foundation grants, and her work is held by
major institutions internationally. Her many books include Second
Sight (1983), At
Twelve (1988), Immediate
Family (1992), Still
Time (1994), What
Remains (2003), Deep
South(2005), Proud
Flesh (2009),
and The
Flesh and the Spirit (2010). A
feature film about her work, What
Remains,
debuted to critical acclaim in 2006. Mann is represented by Gagosian
Gallery, New York and Edwynn Houk Gallery, New York. She lives in
Virginia.
“Few
photographers of any time or place have matched Sally Mann’s
steadiness of simple eyesight, her serene technical brilliance, and
the clearly communicated eloquence she derives from her subjects,
human and otherwise – subjects observed with an ardor that is all
but indistinguishable from love.” – Reynolds Price, TIME
Sally
Mann is an American photographer, best known for her large
black-and-white photographs—at first of her young children, then
later of landscapes suggesting decay and death.
Born
in Lexington, Virginia, Mann was the third of three children and
the only daughter. Her father, Robert S. Munger, was a general
practitioner, and her mother, Elizabeth Evans Munger, ran the
bookstore at Washington and Lee University in Lexington.
Mann graduated from The Putney School in 1969, and
attended Bennington College and Friends World College.
She earned a B.A., summa cum laude, from Hollins College (now Hollins
University) in 1974 and a MA in creative writing in 1975.
She took up photography at Putney, where, she claims, her motive was
to be alone in the darkroom with her boyfriend. She made her
photographic debut at Putney, with an image of a nude classmate. Her
father encouraged her interest in photography; his 5x7 camera became
the basis of her use of large format cameras today.
After
graduation, Mann worked as a photographer at Washington and Lee
University. In the mid-1970s she photographed the construction of its
new law school building, the Lewis Hall (now the Sydney Lewis Hall),
leading to her first one-woman exhibition in late 1977 at
the Corcoran Gallery of Artin Washington, D.C. Those
surrealistic images were subsequently included as part of her first
book, Second Sight, published in 1984.
Her
second collection, At Twelve: Portraits of Young Women,
published in 1988, stimulated minor controversy. The images “captured
the confusing emotions and developing identities of adolescent girls
[and the] expressive printing style lent a dramatic and brooding mood
to all of her images.” In the preface to the book, Ann
Beattie says “when a girl is twelve years old, she often wants
– or says she wants – less involvement with adults. […] [it is]
a time in which the girls yearn for freedom and adults feel their own
grip on things becoming a little tenuous, as they realize that they
have to let their children go.” Beattie says that Mann’s
photographs don’t “glamorize the world, but they don’t make it
into something more unpleasant than it is, either.” The girls
photographed in this series are shown “vulnerable in their
youthfulness” but Mann instead focuses on the strength that the
girls possess.
In
one image from the book (shown to the right), Mann says that the
young girl was extremely reluctant to stand closer to her mother’s
boyfriend. Mann said that she thought it was strange because “it
was their peculiar familiarity that had provoked this photograph in
the first place.” Mann didn’t want to crop out the girl’s elbow
but the girl refused to move in closer. According to Mann, the girl’s
mother shot her boyfriend in the face with a .22 several months
later. In court the mother “testified that while she worked nights
at a local truck stop he was ‘at home partying and harassing my
daughter.’” Mann said “the child put it to me somewhat more
directly.” Mann says that she now looks at this photograph
with “a jaggy chill of realization.”
Mann
is perhaps best known for Immediate Family, her third
collection, published in 1992. The NY Times said, “Probably no
photographer in history has enjoyed such a burst of success in the
art world.” The book consists of 65 black-and-white photographs of
her three children, all under the age of 10. Many of the pictures
were taken at the family's remote summer cabin along the river, where
the children played and swam in the nude. Many explore typical
childhood themes (skinny dipping, reading the funnies, dressing up,
vamping, napping, playing board games) but others touch on darker
themes such as insecurity, loneliness, injury, sexuality and death.
The controversy on its release was intense, including accusations
of child pornography (both in America and abroad) and
of contrived fiction with constructed tableaux.
Negative
criticism of Mann's works is not hard to find. One man, Pat Robertson
of the Christian Broadcasting Network, was against Mann’s
photographs. He believes that parents should do everything in their
power to protect, shelter, and nurture their children. He says that
“selling photographs of children in their nakedness for profit is
an exploitation of the parental role and I think it’s wrong.”
Another negative criticism was found in Raymond Sokolov’s
article Critique: Censoring Virginia in the Wall
Street Journal. He talked about whether federal money should be given
to the arts and whether or not children should be photographed nude.
In the article, he used an image of Virginia (Virginia at 4) to
illustrate it and he covered her eyes, nipples, and pubic region with
black bars. Mann said he used the image without permission “to
illustrate that this is the kind of thing that shouldn’t be shown.”
Mann was devastated and insulted that someone could mutilate her
photograph like that. Virginia was also upset about the article. She
wrote a letter to the author saying “Dear Sir, I don’t like the
way you crossed me out.” Mann said that after Virginia saw the
article, she started touching herself on the areas that were blacked
out saying “what’s wrong with me?”
Many
of her other photographs containing her nude or hurt children caused
controversy. For example, in The Perfect Tomato, the viewer sees
a nude Jessie, posing on a picnic table outside, bathed in light.
Jessie told Steven Cantor during the filming of one of his movies
that she had just been playing around and her mother told her to
freeze, and she tried to capture the image in a rush because the sun
was setting. This explains why everything is blurred except for the
tomato, hence the photograph's title. This image was likely
criticized for Jessie’s blatant nudity and presentation of the
adolescent female form. While Jessie was aware of this photograph,
Dana Cox, in her essay, said that the Mann children were probably
unaware of the other photographs being taken as Mann’s children
were often naked because “it came natural to them.” This
habit of nudity is a family thing because Mann says she used to walk
around her house naked when she was growing up. Cox states that “the
own artist’s childhood is reflected in the way she captures moments
in her children’s lives.” One image that deals more with another
aspect of childhood besides "naked play", Jessie's
Cut, shows Jessie's head, wrapped in what appears to be plastic, with
blood running down the side of her face from the cut above her left
eye. The cut is stitched and the blood is dry and stains her skin. As
painful as the image looks, there are a great number of viewers who
could relate to Jessie when they think about the broken bones and
stitched up cuts they had during childhood.
Mann
herself considered these photographs to be “natural through the
eyes of a mother, since she has seen her children in every state:
happy, sad, playful, sick, bloodied, angry and even naked.” Critics
agreed, saying her “vision in large measure [is] accurate, and a
welcome corrective to familiar notions of youth as a time of
unalloyed sweetness and innocence,” and that the book “created
a place that looked like Eden, then cast upon it the subdued and
shifting light of nostalgia, sexuality and death."
When Time magazine named her “America’s Best
Photographer” in 2001, it wrote:
Mann recorded a combination of spontaneous and carefully arranged moments of childhood repose and revealingly — sometimes unnervingly — imaginative play. What the outraged critics of her child nudes failed to grant was the patent devotion involved throughout the project and the delighted complicity of her son and daughters in so many of the solemn or playful events. No other collection of family photographs is remotely like it, in both its naked candor and the fervor of its maternal curiosity and care.
The
New Republic considered it "one of the great photograph
books of our time."
Despite
all of the controversy, Mann was never charged with the taking or
selling of child pornography, even though, according to Edward de
Grazia, law professor and civil liberties expert, “any federal
prosecutor anywhere in the country could bring a case against [Mann]
in Virginia, and not only seize her photos, her equipment, her
Rolodexes, but also seize her children for psychiatric and physical
examination.” Mann always put her children's well-being first.
Before she published Immediate Family, she consulted a
Virginian Federal prosecutor who told her that some of the images she
was exhibiting could have her arrested. She decided to postpone the
publication of the book in 1991. In an interview with New York
Times reporter, Richard Woodward, she said “I thought the book
could wait 10 years, when the kids won’t be living in the same
bodies. They’ll have matured and they’ll understand the
implications of the pictures. I unilaterally decided.” The
children apparently did not like this decision and Mann and her
husband arranged for Emmett and Jessie to talk to a psychologist to
be sure their feelings were honest and so that they understood what
the publication would do. Each child was then allowed to vote on
which photographs were to be put in the book. To further protect the
children from “teasing,” Mann told Woodward that she wanted
to keep copies of Immediate Family out of their home town
of Lexington. She asked bookstores in the area not to sell it and for
libraries to keep it in their rare-book rooms. Dr. Aaron Esman,
a child psychiatrist at the Payne Whitney Clinic believes that Mann
is serious about her work and that she has “no intention to
jeopardize her children or use them for pornographic images.” He
says that the nude photographs don’t appear to be erotically
stimulating to anyone but a “case-hardened pedophile or a rather
dogmatic religious fundamentalist.”
Her
fourth book, Still Time, published in 1994, was based on the
catalogue of a traveling exhibition that included more than 20 years
of her photography. The 60 images included more photographs of her
children, but also earlier landscapes with color and abstract
photographs.
Later career
In
the mid-1990s, Mann began photographing landscapes on wet plate
collodion 8x10 glass negatives, and again used the same 100-year-old
8 x 10 bellows view camera that she had used for all the previous
bodies of work. These landscapes were first seen in Still Time,
and later featured in two shows presented by the Edwynn Houk Gallery
in NYC: Sally Mann – Mother Land: Recent Landscapes of Georgia
and Virginia in 1997, and then in Deep South: Landscapes of
Louisiana and Mississippi in 1999. Many of these large (40"x50")
black-and-white and manipulated prints were taken using the 19th
century “wet plate” process, or collodion, in which glass
plates are coated with collodion, dipped in silver nitrate, and
exposed while still wet. This gave the photographs what the New
York Times called “a swirling, ethereal image with a center of
preternatural clarity," and showed many flaws and artifacts,
some from the process and some introduced by Mann.
Mann’s
fifth book, What Remains, published in 2003, is based on the
show of the same name at the Corcoran Gallery in
Washington, DC and is in five parts. The first section contains
photographs of the remains of Eva, her greyhound, after
decomposition. The second part has the photographs of dead and
decomposing bodies at a federal Forensic Anthropology Facility
(known as the ‘body farm’). The third part details the site on
her property where an armed escaped convict was killed. The fourth
part is a study of the grounds of Antietam, the site of the
bloodiest single day battle in American history during the Civil
War. The last part is a study of close-ups of the faces of her
children. Thus, this study of mortality, decay and death ends with
hope and love.
Mann’s
sixth book, Deep South, published in 2005, with 65
black-and-white images, includes landscapes taken from 1992 to 2004
using both conventional 8x10 film and wet plate collodion. These
photographs have been described as “haunted landscapes of the
south, battlefields, decaying mansion, kudzu shrouded
landscapes and the site where Emmett Till was murdered."
"Newsweek" picked it as their book choice for the holiday
season, saying that Mann “walks right up to every Southern
stereotype in the book and subtly demolishes each in its turn by
creating indelibly disturbing images that hover somewhere between
document and dream."
Mann's
seventh book, Proud Flesh, published in 2009, is a study taken
over six years of the effects of muscular dystrophy on her
husband Larry Mann. The project was displayed in Gagosian
Gallery in October 2009.
Mann's
eighth book, The Flesh and The Spirit, published in 2010, was
released in conjunction with a comprehensive show at the Virginia
Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia. Though not
a retrospective, this 200 page book includes new and recent work
(unpublished self-portraits, landscapes, images of her husband, her
children's faces, and of the dead at a forensic institute) as well as
early works (unpublished color photographs of her children in the
1990s, color Polaroids and platinum prints from the 1970s). Its
unifying theme is the body, with its vagaries of illnesses and death,
and includes essays by John Ravenal, David Levi Strauss and Anne
Wilkes Tucker.
Her
current projects include a series of self-portraits, a multipart
study of the legacy of slavery in Virginia, and intimate images of
her family and life. The latter, entitled "Marital Trust,"
spans 30 years, and includes intimate details of her family life with
Larry.
In
May 2011 she delivered the three-day Massey Lecture Series at
Harvard. In June 2011, Mann sat down with one of her
contemporaries, Nan Goldin, at Look3 Charlottesville Festival of
the Photograph. The two photographers discussed their respective
careers, particularly the ways in which photographing personal lives
became a source of professional controversy. This was followed
by an appearance at the University of Michigan as part of the Penny
W. Stamps lecture series.
In
1969, Mann met her husband Larry, and they have three children
together: Emmett, born in 1979, who for a time joined the Peace
Corps, Jessie (herself an artist, photographer and model), born in
1981, and Virginia (now a lawyer), born in 1985. Mann lives on a farm
in Virginia with her husband, Larry. He is a
full-time attorney, and has muscular dystrophy, with
progressive weakness.
Mann
is passionate about endurance horse racing. In 2006, Mann's
horse ruptured an aneurysm while she was riding him. In the
horse's death throes, Mann was thrown to the ground and the impact
broke her back. It took her two years to recover from the accident
and during this time, she made a series of ambrotype self-portraits.
These self-portraits were on view for the first time in November 2010
at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts as a part of Sally Mann: the
Flesh and the Spirit.
She
is currently represented by the Gagosian Gallery of New
York City, and the Edwynn Houk Gallery also of New
York City. The latter has a show of Mann's works opening September
13, 2012.
Her
works are included in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Museum of Fine Arts,
in Boston, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and
the Whitney Museum of New York City among many others.
Time magazine
named Mann "America's Best Photographer" in
2001.[18] Photos she took have appeared on the cover of The
New York Times Magazine twice: first, a picture of her three
children for the September 27, 1992 issue with a feature article on
her "disturbing work," and again on September 9. 2001, with
a self-portrait (which also included her two daughters) for a theme
issue on "Women Looking at Women."
Mann
has been the subject of two film documentaries. The first, Blood
Ties, was directed by Steve Cantor, debuted at the 1994
Sundance Film Festival, and was nominated for an Academy
Award as Best Documentary Short. The second, What Remains
was also directed by Steve Cantor. It premiered at the 2006 Sundance
Film Festival and was nominated for an Emmy for Best
Documentary in 2008. In her New York Times review of the film, Ginia
Bellafante wrote, "It is one of the most exquisitely
intimate portraits not only of an artist’s process, but also of a
marriage and a life, to appear on television in recent memory."
Mann
received an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from
the Corcoran Museum in May 2006. The Royal Photographic
Society (UK) awarded her an Honorary Fellowship in 2012.
.jpg)
.jpg)


.jpg)
.png)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)
.jpg)





















































