"Shooting star:
the debut of Jessica Lange, photographer"
by Amy Larocca
Source: New York
Date: 11/24/2008
BEFORE KING KONG,
before the two Oscars, before the love affairs with Mikhail Baryshnikov
and Sam Shepard, Jessica Lange was a square-jawed student of fine art
at the University of Minnesota, taking an intro class in photography.
There were any number of ways things could have gone from there, but
they went like this: She fell in love with the friend of her photography
professor, and he persuaded her to drop out of school in order to live
la vie boheme in Spain and Amsterdam. "We made documentary films,"
she says, "and then we came to New York. It was 1969."
And as it was '69, and as
she moved to downtown Manhattan, there was an underground theater group
(black turtlenecks, slender Capri pants), followed by a move to Paris
in order to study mime. And then she was back in New York, being pursued
by Bob Fosse and carried up the side of the World Trade Center by an
outsize gorilla.
One can easily see how the
photography thing just slipped away, eclipsed by life as a movie star.
"I never gave it another thought," she says, sitting in a
back booth at Knickerbocker on University Place, where she's just discussed
the Times crossword--"Thursday? I can't do Thursday!"--with
another regular.
But about fifteen years ago,
Lange's longtime partner, Shepard, brought a Leica home from a movie
set, and Lange was right back into it, mostly shooting her kids. (She
has a daughter by Baryshnikov, and a son and daughter with Shepard.)
"It was great," she says of holding the camera again. She
was living with Shepard in the Virginia countryside by then. Everything
was idyllic, bucolic, domestic. "I'd go down into the basement
after the kids were in bed," she says, "put on some Al Green
and Sam Cooke, and develop pictures."
It's not uncommon for performers
to develop a love of another visual art. Witness this month's W (photographs
of Angelina Jolie by Brad Pitt), or similar work by Bryan Adams, Andy
Summers, and Dennis Hopper. There's something about the role reversal,
about the safety of doing the watching instead of being watched, that
must be liberating.
"It's a great counterpoint
to filmmaking," Lange explains, "because it's such a private,
solitary experience. It's like writing or painting; it's something you
can do on your own. Acting is a co-dependent art form, and the actor
is not in control. And filmmaking definitely informs the decision to
photograph something. I'm drawn to situations with a dramatic feel to
them as far as lighting or backdrop or people's presence, the way someone
stands."
About five years ago, Lange
showed her work to Donata Wenders (Mrs. Wim), a photographer herself,
who encouraged Lange to start printing, and thinking, bigger. Lange
and Shepard, now empty nesters, were moving back to New York anyway,
and so she started printing at a professional lab, and growing braver.
"I can describe acting
in much more concrete terms than I can photography," she says of
the work. "But there's something about presenting an image in black-and-white
that's so reductive in a way. It sort of eliminates all extraneous information."
This week, a book of Lange's
photographs will be published by PowerHouse Books. The images in 50
Photographs are all black-and-white, shot mostly during Lange's
considerable travels as an actress and as a volunteer for charities
in Russia and Africa, as well as in the northern part of Minnesota,
where she still keeps a tiny house. There's even one photo from the
first roll she took with her Leica, while in Romania, fifteen years
ago. They are overwhelmingly quiet shots.
"Showing them to people
outside my family was a big step for me," Lange says. "When
I first showed them to [photographer] Brigitte Lacombe, she said to
me, 'Oh, Jessie. Why are you still so lonely?' And I realized that I'm
attracted to people in solitary situations that are evocative of lonesomeness."
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