Joel Meyerowitz’s captivating portraits of redheads
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Joel Meyerowitz
In the summer of 1978 while staying on Cape Cod, Joel Meyerowitz was struck by the way the light illuminated the human face. Working with a large-format wooden camera, the street photographer decided it was time to begin investigating the mysterious powers of portraiture.
Although he had long photographed people he encountered on the street, Meyerowitz understood the portrait as something different – something intentional that could reveal insight not only into the subject, but into the artist himself. Curious to see where the medium and his instincts converged, Meyerowitz began making intimate portraits of the people he encountered in Provincetown.
“Sometimes you see someone and they’re magnetic,” he says. “There’s something about the frizz of their hair, the way they stand, the vibrancy coming off them – so many subtle human characteristics that might call out to the photographer. Something feels so vital that if I don’t cross that social distance I might lose that connection forever.”
Meyerowitz embarked on what has since become a lifelong passion for portraiture – only to discover an unlikely surprise. Upon reviewing the hundred or so portraits he made that first month of work, some 35 were photographs of redheads.
Although redheads only account for two per cent of the US population, Meyerowitz found that he kept encountering them. Intrigued by their shared genetic features and luminous colouring that runs the gamut from delicate strawberry blondes to bold and brassy reds, he began to create a singular collection of portraits collected in the landmark 1990 book, Redheads. He sought them out in places – on the beach, at nightclubs – where they might feel comfortable revealing their personalities.
More recently, Meyerowitz has revisited his archive for a new look at an old favourite. Featuring new and previously unseen portraits, the expanded Damiani edition also includes a lyrical meditation on portraiture penned by Meyerowitz that runs throughout the book like a prose poem.
“What is a portrait? Who is it really of? Does it tell the truth? And whose truth?” Meyerowitz writes in the book. They are questions that reveal and conceal themselves in the mesmerising faces he photographs.
“The face is such a dynamic, expressive part of our bodies and yet it is the least moveable part,” he adds. “It has to convey all the inner workings of your mind, emotions, passions, and sensibilities.”
At the same time, the portrait reveals a side of the photographer he might not otherwise have known but for this chance encounter made on the road. “I have to be an exquisite reader of character, and that doesn’t come easy,” Meyerowitz says.
“But once I’m in the relationship, that person has allowed me to enter their emotional space so I’m incredibly watchful and alert. I begin to get a sense of the hidden spirit and shift my tone to address the doubts and bring them safety. I’m trying to mobilise my humanity to engage with them in the fairest way possible to maintain a magical relationship that has come out of nothing.”
Redheads is published by Damiani.
Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.
Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.
Latest on Huck
Inside the UK’s first festival dedicated to East and Southeast Asian alternative culture and music
From dancefloor heat to post-punk, Margins United is a showcase of creativity and a bubbling underground community.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The Female Gaze: Eve Arnold’s intimate portrait of Marilyn
A reprint of ‘Marilyn Monroe By Eve Arnold’ with a new introduction from Arnold’s grandson revisits the pair’s extraordinary collaboration.
Written by: Miss Rosen
The film celebrating 40 years of queer resistance
Alongside the re-issue of Bronski Beat’s iconic ‘Age of Consent’, the band have worked with acclaimed filmmaker Matt Lambert to create a powerful new video for single ‘Why?’ exploring four decades of struggle.
Written by: Ben Smoke
A tribute to Erwin Olaf, the visionary photographer and LGBTQ icon
A recent exhibition offered an intimate look back at the artist’s poignant and provocative four-decade career.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Piracy in the UK: the failed war on illegal content
Twenty years since the infamous ‘You Wouldn't Steal a Car’ advert, knock-off media is more rampant than ever. But can we justify our buccaneering piracy?
Written by: Kyle MacNeill
We’re shutting down the government - here’s why
Hundreds of people have descended on Whitehall this morning to protest the British government’s complicity in the ongoing genocide in Gaza.
Written by: Cecilia fire