“I would rather make a picture rather
than be one.”
Lee Miller
Lee Miller
Such was the
appetite for life of the American fashion model, photographer, artist and muse,
war correspondent and gourmet cook Lee
Miller which combined with her beauty contrived to ensure that her desire
was only partially met.
Taught by
her amateur photographer father the rudiments of the craft whilst she modeled
in the nude for him in her teens, Miller threw over a successful New York modeling
career with Vogue to become a student of the surrealist artist Man Ray.
At the age of 22 Miller went to Paris in pursuit of her quarry.
About which the Telegraph
reports her as saying “It was intentional on my part, I was chasing him.”
They first met in a Paris bar where she introduced herself “My name is
Lee Miller, and I’m your new student.’ Man [Ray] said, ‘I don’t have students.’
He was leaving for Biarritz the next day, and I said, ‘So am I.’ I never looked
back!”
Over the next three years Miller was Man Ray’s student, assistant,
collaborator and lover. They fell out over the photograph Neck - portrait of Lee Miller (see above) three years later. Taken
by Man Ray but rescued from the trash and worked up by Miller they quarreled severely
over its authorship.
In 1932 Miller returned to New York and opened a commercial photographic
studio. Her Paris work was included in the Julien Levey Gallery’s exhibition
Modern European Photography and the following year she had the only solo
exhibition held in her life time.
Miller then married the business man Aziz
Eloui Bey and moved to Egypt. Whilst she photographed the pyramids, the
desert and portraits of the “the black-satin-and-pearls set”
expatriates, Miller became bored and returned to Paris after three years of living
in the lap of luxury.
When World War II broke out Miller was in London and she took up
photojournalism.
“Naturally
I took pictures. What’s a girl supposed to do when a battle lands in her lap?”
the New
York Times has reported her as saying.
Before America entered the conflict Miller sent images of the London Blitz
to American Vogue. After the “Yanks went over there” Miller became an
accredited war correspondent for Vogue and reported, in both words and pictures,
many of the atrocities she encountered in Europe. Including the concentration
camps at Buchenwald and
Dachau and during the war’s aftermath of children dying in a Vienna Hospital.
“I hope no one will ever forget the subject of those photos. Because I
won’t,” she has been reported as saying.
And she didn’t. Suffering what today would be diagnosed as Post Traumatic
Stress Disorder, Miller abandoned her photography and journalism retreating
into the arms of alcohol addiction. Although she was able to develop her culinary
skills cooking gourmet meals for pre-war friends like Man Ray, Miro and
Picasso.
But as her son Antony Penrose, who is the director of his mother’s
archive and his father’s, surrealist artist Sir Roland Penrose, collection, has
said “I knew she was handy with a camera when I was little — but that was about
it. She never talked about the war.”
The exhibition The Indestructible Lee Miller is currently on show
at Fort Lauderdale’s NUS
Art Museum until the 14th of February next year.
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