Exploring Irving Penn’s subversive approach to photography

Exploring Irving Penn’s subversive approach to photography
A new exhibition showcases the artist’s revolutionary seven-decade career, including groundbreaking series “The Incredibles”.

In January 1967, Timothy Leary stood before a crowd of 20,000 in Golden State Park, spreading the word, “Turn on, tune in, drop out”, a nod to the flowering use of psychedelics like mushrooms and LSD. That May, San Francisco (Be Sure to Wear Flowers in Your Hair) hit the charts, while musicians Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Jerry Garcia could readily be found on the streets of the city’s Haight Asbury district where they lived.

Heeding the call, over 100,000 American teens and young adults headed west, arriving at the Haight for the Summer of Love and ushering in arrival of the hippie generation. Living by the ethos of sex drugs, and rock & roll, a new counterculture emerged, fusing the spirit of civil rights, women’s liberation, sexual revolution, and the anti-war movement into a sparkling Molotov cocktail.

The American media couldn’t get enough. Amid the sensational and salacious reportage, one man stood alone: the legendary photographer Irving Penn (1917–2009). “In 1967, there was word coming out of San Francisco of something stirring,” Penn later said. “People spoke of a new kind of young people called hippies. They seemed to have found a satisfying new life for themselves in leaving the society they were born to and making their own.”

Top to bottom: Irving Penn. Hells Angel (Doug), San Francisco, 1967, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of The Irving Penn Foundation, 2021; Irving Penn. Hippie Family (Kelley), San Francisco, 1967, The Irving Penn Foundation.

Then 50, Penn recognised the historic moment unfolding on the world stage and proposed “The Incredibles” to his editors at Look magazine: a story that would cast rock stars, hippies, and Hell’s Angels with the same gravitas he gave to portraits of President John F. Kennedy, Pablo Picasso, and the Duchess of Windsor.

Look obliged with an 8-page feature showcasing Penn’s motley cast of artists, radicals, and vagabonds in the 9 January 1968 issue. But what many readers didn’t know is that the magazine censored Penn, removing his work from “The Bath,” a series of photographs documenting a 1957 performance by members of the San Francisco Dancers’ Workshop in the nude.

Although Penn rarely showed them in his lifetime, they are now restored to their rightful place in this groundbreaking series with new exhibition and catalogue, Irving Penn, which spans the artist’s revolutionary seven-decade career.

Irving Penn. Rock Groups (Big Brother and the Holding Company and The Grateful Dead), San Francisco, 1967, The Irving Penn Foundation.

To create “The Incredibles”, Penn packed his entire New York studio and shipped it to a barn-like building with exquisite northern light nestled in the nearby town of Sausalito located on the San Francisco Bay. The concrete walls readily transformed into a neutral backdrop, preserving the rough and ready energy of the people he photographed while the natural light bathed them in the sun’s softest rays, casting them in a sweet and ethereal light.

“In his portraits of hippie families, Penn captured the intimacy of his subjects’ romantic and familial bonds, as well as their unapologetic nonconformism and unconventional styles,” says says Emma Acker, curator of American art at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “Such explorations reflect the complexity and fullness of the human experience and condition, as well as the keen eye and technical brilliance of their creator.”

Irving Penn. Audrey Hepburn, Paris, 1951, The Metropolitan Musem of Art, Gift of The Irving Penn Foundation, 2021, Condé Nast.

Irving Penn is on view through July 21, 2024, at the de Young Museum in San Francisco and publication of the exhibition catalogue by The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Distributed by Yale University Press.

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