In these images, and throughout her work, the contrast between normality and abnormality is a critical theme. 1963 1963, printed after 1971 (Tate AR00526) and Retired man and his wife in a nudist camp one morning, N.J. In 1963 Arbus shot a series of photographs of nudists which included images such as A y oung waitress at a nudist camp, N.J. Instead she reimagines the biblical pair as a realistic modern couple in all their imperfections. Arbus does not insist that the couple portrayed are physically ideal or even beautiful. In this regard, Arbus’s photograph is something of a parody of Dürer’s engraving, as Armstrong argues, calling the scene a ‘“mucked-up” Paradise’ (Armstrong 1993, p.31). Muck it up.” And they did’ (Arbus 1966, p.69). In ‘Notes on the Nudist Camp’, Arbus makes the connection explicitly describing the environment of a nudist camp ‘as if way back in the Garden of Eden, after the Fall, Adam and Eve had begged the Lord to forgive them and God, in his boundless exasperation, has said, “All right then, STAY. However, while Dürer’s work is concerned with a celebration of the ideal human form, Arbus explores the conflict between convention and abnormality. The two artworks share formal similarities in that each portrays a nude man and woman standing side by side amid natural greenery. Art historian Carol Armstrong has compared this photograph with Albrecht Dürer’s engraving Adam and Eve 1504 in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (Armstrong 1993, pp.29–33). This photograph perhaps also forces a comparison between the nudist camp and the Garden of Eden in the Old Testament story of the Fall of Man (Genesis 3). In her photographic practice Arbus often sought out subjects who might be considered ‘outsiders’, and got to know them before she photographed them. Despite this concern, the couple in the photograph appear without attempting to conceal their identities, with the man offering a smile. Everyone is known by their first name’ (Arbus 1966, p.69). For instance, in an article entitled ‘Notes on the Nudist Camp’, written for (but not published by) Esquire in 1966 after a visit to the Sunrise Haven Nudist Camp, Arbus noted that, ‘for many of, their presence is the darkest secret of their lives, unsuspected by relatives, friends, and employers in the outside world, the disclosure of which might bring disgrace. This tension belies the ethical question at the centre of Arbus’s photographic practice. The clarity of the image and studio portrait style contrasts with their appearance and the forest setting. 1963 establishes tension between the everyday pose and habituated relationship of the man and woman, and their nudity. The composition of A husband and wife in the woods at a nudist camp, N.J. 1963, this is evidenced by the minute details of the scene, such as the leaves on the trees or the corner of the cigarette carton in the man’s hand. In A husband and wife in the woods at a nudist camp, N.J. However, while the TLR restricts the artist’s range and speed of movement, larger format 120 film increases the clarity of detail as compared to the 35 mm SLR. This meant that Arbus had to configure the scene rather than shoot spontaneously. The 2¼ twin-lens is a larger, heavier camera which is operated a waist level. Arbus began using the 2¼ twin-lens in 1962 after transitioning from a 35 mm Nikon SLR. This photograph is a gelatin silver print on paper shot using a 2¼ twin-lens reflex (TLR) Rolleiflex camera. He has a lean figure, short dark hair and wears no clothing or accessories, but discreetly holds a packet of cigarettes in his right hand. The man stands on her right, his body turned at a forty-five degree angle, and directs his smiling gaze up above the lens. She has dark, cropped hair and a curved figure. The woman looks just to the left of the camera and wears flip-flops and a thin cross necklace. In the background two cabins can be seen through the trees in the left and right of the frame. The couple stand holding hands in a small dirt clearing, centered in the frame amid a patch of oak trees. 1963 1963, printed after 1971 is a black and white photograph by the American photographer Diane Arbus that depicts a naked man and woman standing in the woods. A husband and wife in the woods at a nudist camp, N.J.
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