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词条 Weegee
释义

  1. Life

  2. Name

  3. Photographic career

     Photographic technique  Late 1930s to mid-1940s  1950s and 1960s 

  4. Legacy

  5. In popular culture

  6. Public collections

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{About|the 20th-century photographer}}{{pp-move-indef}}{{use mdy dates|date=March 2016}}{{Infobox person
|name = Weegee
|image = Weegee-International Center of Photography.jpg
|image_size = 225px
|alt =
|birth_name = Ascher (Usher) Fellig
|birth_date = {{Birth date|1899|06|12}}
|birth_place = Złoczów, Galicia, Austria-Hungary (now Zolochiv, Ukraine)
|death_date = {{Death date and age|1968|12|26|1899|06|12}}
|death_place = New York City, New York, U.S.
|other_names = Arthur Fellig
|known_for = Street photography of crime scenes or emergencies
|occupation = Photographer
|years_active =
|spouse =
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Weegee was the pseudonym of Arthur (Usher) Fellig (June 12, 1899 – December 26, 1968), a photographer and photojournalist, known for his stark black and white street photography.[1] Weegee worked in Manhattan, New York City's Lower East Side, as a press photographer during the 1930s and ‘40s, and he developed his signature style by following the city's emergency services and documenting their activity.[2] Much of his work depicted unflinchingly realistic scenes of urban life, crime, injury and death. Weegee published photographic books and also worked in cinema, initially making his own short films and later collaborating with film directors such as Jack Donohue and Stanley Kubrick.

Life

Weegee was born Ascher (later anglicized to Usher) Fellig in Złoczów (now Zolochiv, Ukraine), near Lemberg in Austrian Galicia. His given name was changed to Arthur when he emigrated with his family to New York in 1909. There he took numerous odd jobs, including working as a street photographer of children on his pony[3] and as an assistant to a commercial photographer. In 1924 he was hired as a darkroom technician by Acme Newspictures (later United Press International Photos). He left Acme in 1935 to become a freelance photographer. Describing his beginnings, Weegee stated:

In my particular case I didn't wait 'til somebody gave me a job or something, I went and created a job for myself—freelance photographer. And what I did, anybody else can do. What I did simply was this: I went down to Manhattan Police Headquarters and for two years I worked without a police card or any kind of credentials. When a story came over a police teletype, I would go to it. The idea was I sold the pictures to the newspapers. And naturally, I picked a story that meant something.[4]

He worked at night and competed with the police to be first at the scene of a crime, selling his photographs to tabloids and photographic agencies.[5] His photographs, centered around Manhattan police headquarters, were soon published by the Herald Tribune, World-Telegram, Daily News, New York Post, New York Journal American, Sun, and others.{{citation needed|date=June 2017}}

In 1957, after developing diabetes, he moved in with Wilma Wilcox, a Quaker social worker whom he had known since the 1940s, and who cared for him and then cared for his work.[6] He traveled extensively in Europe until 1964, working for the London Daily Mirror and on a variety of photography, film, lecture, and book projects.[7] On December 26, 1968, Weegee died in New York at the age of 69.[8]

Name

The origin of Fellig's pseudonym is uncertain. One of his earliest jobs was in the photo lab of The New York Times, where (in a reference to the tool used to wipe down prints) he was nicknamed "Squeegee Boy". Later, during his employment with Acme Newspictures, his skill and ingenuity in developing prints on the run (e.g., in a subway car) earned him the name "Mr. Squeegee".[9] He may subsequently have been dubbed "Weegee"–a phonetic rendering of Ouija–because his instant and seemingly prescient arrivals at scenes of crimes or other emergencies seemed as magical as a Ouija board.[9][2]

Photographic career

Photographic technique

Most of his notable photographs were taken with very basic press photographer equipment and methods of the era, a 4×5 Speed Graphic camera preset at f/16 at 1/200 of a second, with flashbulbs and a set focus distance of ten feet.[10] He was a self-taught photographer with no formal training.[11] He is often said—incorrectly—to have developed his photographs in a makeshift darkroom in the trunk of his car.[12] While Fellig would shoot a variety of subjects and individuals, he also had a sense of what sold best:

Names make news. There's a fight between a drunken couple on Third Avenue or Ninth Avenue in Hell's Kitchen, nobody cares. It's just a barroom brawl. But if society has a fight in a Cadillac on Park Avenue and their names are in the Social Register, this makes news and the papers are interested in that.[13]

Weegee is spuriously credited for answering "f/8 and be there" when asked about his photographic technique.[14] Whether or not he actually said it, the saying has become so widespread in photographic circles as to have become a cliché.[15][16]

Some of Weegee's photos, like the juxtaposition of society grandes dames in ermines and tiaras and a glowering street woman at the Metropolitan Opera (The Critic, 1943), were later revealed to have been staged.[17][18]

Late 1930s to mid-1940s

In 1938, Fellig became the only New York freelance newspaper photographer with a permit to have a portable police-band shortwave radio. Weegee worked mostly at night; he listened closely to broadcasts and often beat authorities to the scene.[19]

In 1943 five of his photographs were acquired by the Museum of Modern Art. These works were included in their exhibition entitled, Action Photography.[20] He was later included in "50 Photographs by 50 Photographers", another MoMA show organized by photographer Edward Steichen,[20] and he lectured at the New School for Social Research. Advertising and editorial assignments for magazines followed, including Life and beginning in 1945, Vogue.

Naked City (1945) was his first book of photographs. Film producer Mark Hellinger bought the rights to the title from Weegee.[20] In 1948, Weegee's aesthetic formed the foundation for Hellinger's film The Naked City. It was based on a gritty 1948 story written by Malvin Wald about the investigation into a model's murder in New York. Wald was nominated for an Academy Award for his screenplay, co-written with screenwriter, Albert Maltz, who would later be blacklisted in the McCarthy-era.[21] Later the title was used again for a naturalistic television police drama series, and in the 1980s, it was adopted by a band, Naked City, led by the New York experimental musician John Zorn.{{citation needed|date=June 2017}}

According to the commentary by director Robert Wise, Weegee appeared in the 1949 film The Set-Up, ringing the bell at the boxing match.{{citation needed|date=June 2017}}

1950s and 1960s

Weegee experimented with 16mm filmmaking himself beginning in 1941 and worked in the Hollywood industry from 1946 to the early 1960s, as an actor and a consultant. He was an uncredited special effects consultant

[22]

and credited still photographer for Stanley Kubrick's 1964 film How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. His accent was one of the influences for the accent of the title character in the film, played by Peter Sellers.[22]

In the 1950s and 1960s, Weegee experimented with panoramic photographs, photo distortions and photography through prisms. Using a plastic lens, he made a famous photograph of Marilyn Monroe in which her face is grotesquely distorted yet still recognizable.[23] For the 1950 movie The Yellow Cab Man, Weegee contributed a sequence in which automobile traffic is wildly distorted. He is credited for this as "Luigi" in the film's opening titles. He also traveled widely in Europe in the 1960s, where he photographed nude subjects. In London he befriended pornographer Harrison Marks and the model Pamela Green whom he photographed.{{citation needed|date=June 2017}}

In 1962[24], Weegee starred as himself in a "Nudie Cutie" exploitation film, intended to be a pseudo-documentary of his life. Called The 'Imp'probable Mr. Wee Gee, it saw Fellig apparently falling in love with a shop-window dummy that he follows to Paris, all the while pursuing or photographing various women.[25]

Legacy

Weegee can be seen as the American counterpart to Brassaï, who photographed Paris street scenes at night. Weegee's themes of nudists, circus performers, freaks and street people were later taken up and developed by Diane Arbus in the early 1960s.[5]

In 1980 Weegee's companion, Wilma Wilcox, along with Sidney Kaplan, Aaron Rose and Larry Silver formed The Weegee Portfolio Incorporated to create an exclusive collection of photographic prints made from Weegee's original negatives.[26] As a bequest, Wilma Wilcox donated the entire Weegee archive – 16,000 photographs and 7,000 negatives[6] – to the International Center of Photography in New York. This 1993 gift and transfer of copyright became the source for several exhibitions and books including Weegee's World, edited by Miles Barth (1997), and Unknown Weegee, edited by Cynthia Young (2006). The first and largest exhibition was the 329-image Weegee's World: Life, Death and the Human Drama, mounted in 1997. It was followed in 2002 by Weegee's Trick Photography, a show of distorted or otherwise caricatured images, and four years later by Unknown Weegee, a survey that emphasized his less violent, post-tabloid photographs.[6]

In 2009, the Kunsthalle Vienna held an exhibition called Elevator to the Gallows. The exhibition combined modern installations by Banks Violette with Weegee's nocturnal photography.[27]

In 2012 ICP opened another Weegee exhibition titled, Murder Is My Business. Also in 2012, an exhibition called Weegee: The Naked City,[28] opened at Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow. In 2013 Weegee's autobiography, originally published in 1961 as Weegee by Weegee and long out of print, was retitled as Weegee: The Autobiography and republished.[29]

From April 2013 through July 2014 the Flatz Museum in Dornbirn, Austria presented Weegee. How to photograph a corpse, based on relevant photographs from Weegee's portfolio, including many vintage prints. Original newspapers and magazines dating back to the time where the photos were taken accompanied the photographs.[30]

In popular culture

  • According to director Dario Argento, the photographer played by Harvey Keitel in his segment of Two Evil Eyes was inspired by Weegee.
  • The 1992 film The Public Eye is said to be loosely based on Weegee[31]
  • A 1999 episode of The X-Files, "Tithonus", concerns an immortal photographer named "Alfred Fellig" and his crime photos.
  • A crop of his 1940 photo "Crowd at Coney Island" was used as the cover for the 1990 George Michael album Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1.
  • The John Zorn-led band Naked City took their name and first album cover from Weegee.
  • Weegee is the photographer for the Minutemen in the movie Watchmen
  • The 2014 film Nightcrawler was also inspired by Weegee.[32]

Public collections

  • Museum of Modern Art, New York
  • The Jewish Museum
  • Rijksmuseum Amsterdam[33]
  • International Center of Photography[34]

See also

  • The Public Eye – Filmmaker Howard Franklin was unable to secure the rights to Fellig's life story, so he created a fictionalized version.[35]

References

Notes
1. ^{{Cite book|title=Encyclopedia of Journalism|last=Hudson|first=Berkley|publisher=SAGE|year=2009|isbn=978-0-7619-2957-4|editor-last=Sterling|editor-first=Christopher H.|location=Thousand Oaks, Calif.|pages=1060–67}}
2. ^{{cite news|author=Cotter, Holland|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/09/arts/design/09weeg.html|title='Unknown Weegee,' on Photographer Who Made the Night Noir|date=June 9, 2006|newspaper=The New York Times}}
3. ^Weegee's autobiography
4. ^Fellig, Arthur. "Weegee Interview" BOMB Magazine Summer, 1987.
5. ^Weegee MoMA Collection, New York.
6. ^Roberta Smith (January 19, 2012), [https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/20/arts/design/weegee-at-international-center-of-photography-review.html He Made Blood and Guts Familiar and Fabulous] New York Times.
7. ^Bonanos, Christopher, Flash: The Making of Weegee the Famous, Henry Holt, 2016, chapters 23–25.
8. ^Bonanos, p. 315.
9. ^{{cite journal | last = Kosner | first = Edward | title = Shots in the Dark | journal = The New York Review of Books | volume = 65 | issue = 19 | pages = 44–45 | date = December 6, 2018}}
10. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=U3qXOp1iT6QC&pg=PA404 Goldberg, Viki, Photography in print: writings from 1816 to the present, University of New Mexico Press, 1988, p.414]
11. ^Bonanos, ch. 2 and 3.
12. ^Bonanos, p. 99.
13. ^Fellig, Arthur. "Weegee Interview"BOMB Magazine Summer, 1987
14. ^{{cite web|last1=North|first1=D. Travis|title=f/8 and Be There – What We Can Learn From WeeGee's Philosophy|url=http://www.shutterphoto.net/article/f8-and-be-there-what-we-can-learn-from-weegees-philosophy/|website=Shutter Photo|accessdate=13 June 2016|date=22 September 2011}}
15. ^{{cite news|last1=Newman|first1=Joe|title='F/8 and Be There' — as True Now as It Was in Weegee's Day|url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joe-newman/f8-and-be-there----as-tru_b_5486730.html|accessdate=13 June 2016|publisher=Huffington Post|date=11 August 2014|quote=The legendary street photographer Arthur "Weegee" Fellig is often credited with first coining the phrase "f/8 and be there."}}
16. ^{{cite web |title=f/8 And Be There |url=https://www.adorama.com/alc/0013109/article/f8-And-Be-There |website=Adorama Learning Center |publisher=Adorama camera |accessdate=10 October 2018 |date=21 June 2011}}
17. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20080405232316/http://www.nga.gov/press/exh/252/252walltxt.pdf The Streets of New York] (catalog of National Gallery of Art show)
18. ^{{cite web|url=http://museum.icp.org/museum/collections/special/weegee/weegee09.html|title=Weegee's World: The Opera|publisher=}}
19. ^Bonanos, p. 100–101.
20. ^{{cite web|url=http://museum.icp.org/museum/collections/special/weegee/chronology.html|title=Weegee's World: Chronology International Centre of Photography|publisher=}}
21. ^[https://www.usatoday.com/life/movies/news/2008-03-09-wald-obit_N.htm 'Naked City' writer Malvin Wald, USA Today, 3/09/2008]
22. ^{{citation|ref=moca117|url=http://www.moca.org/audio/blog/?cat=11|title=The Curve: A Tour of Naked Hollywood|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120121173723/http://www.moca.org/audio/blog/?cat=117|archivedate=2012-01-21|accessdate=2015-12-05|dead-url=yes}}
23. ^{{cite web|url=http://museum.icp.org/museum/collections/special/weegee/weegee18.html|title=Weegee's World: Distortions International Center of Photography, New York, 1994, 1997|publisher=}}
24. ^Bonanos, p. 294–297.
25. ^The 'Imp'probable Mr. Wee Gee, Internet Movie Database
26. ^{{cite web|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090216022419/http://amber-online.com/sections/side-gallery/pages/weegee-portfolio-an-interview|title=Side Gallery - Weegee Portfolio - Interview with Sid Kaplan - Amber Online|date=February 16, 2009|publisher=}}
27. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.kunsthallewien.at/#/en/exhibitions/elevator-gallows|title=Kunsthalle Wien :: Home|publisher=}}
28. ^{{cite web|url=http://mamm-mdf.ru/en/exhibitions/weegee/|title=Weegee: The Naked City, MAMM}}
29. ^{{cite web|url=https://devault-gravesagency.weebly.com/weegee-the-autobiography.html|title=Devault-Graves blog|publisher=}}
30. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.flatzmuseum.at/News-Anzeigen.7467.0.html?&no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5BpS%5D=1439787203&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=6258&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=12305|title=FLATZ Museum|publisher=}}
31. ^{{cite news |title=PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A TABLOID PHOTOGRAPHER |url=http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1992-10-14-9204030099-story.html |accessdate=10 October 2018 |publisher=The Chicago Tribune |date=14 October 1992 |quote=Bernzy himself seems to be based on the real-life figure of Arthur Fellig, who, under the name Weegee, created some of the most startling and vivid photographs to come out of the urban maelstrom.}}
32. ^Friend, Tad. "Rembrandt Lighting" The New Yorker (November 10, 2014)
33. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/en/search?f=1&p=1&ps=12&maker=Arthur+Fellig|title=Search – Rijksmuseum|work=Rijksmuseum}}
34. ^"Major Holdings: Weegee (1899–1968)" on the International Center of Photography website
35. ^{{cite web |last1=Greco |first1=John |title=The Public Eye (1992) Howard Franklin |website=Twenty Four Frames |accessdate=10 October 2018 |url= https://twentyfourframes.wordpress.com/2018/02/06/the-public-eye-1992-howard-franklin/ |quote=Written and directed by Howard Franklin, The Public Eye is a film very loosely based on the life of tabloid photographer, Arthur Fellig, better known as Weegee. Franklin apparently could not obtain the rights to Weegee's story, so he wrote a fictionalized tale about a cigar smoking New York City tabloid photographer who had access to a police radio which always made him first on the scene. In the film, the character is called Leon Bernstein or Bernzy or, as his byline reads, The Great Bernzini.}}
Further reading
  • Barth, Miles; Bergala, Alain; and Handy, Ellen. Weegee's World Boston: Little Brown, 1997.
  • Lee, Anthony W. and Meyer, Richard. Weegee and Naked City (Defining Moments in American Photography)
  • Purcell, Kerry William. Weegee (Phaidon, 2004)
  • Weegee. Weegee by Weegee (1961 (revised, reprinted, and retitled as Weegee: The Autobiography, 2013), autobiography)

External links

  • {{Britannica|1257491}}
  • [https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/20/arts/design/20expl.html New York Times, June 20, 2008, "Crime Was Weegee’s Oyster"]
  • [https://www.wired.com/rawfile/2009/06/weegee/ Wired News, June 29, 2009, "‘You Gotta Get It’ — Words of Wisdom From Weegee"]
  • Weegee's World: Life, Death and the Human Drama
  • Weegee archive on eMuseum.icp.org, all works © International Center of Photography
  • {{IMDb name|id=0271460|name=Arthur 'Weegee' Fellig}}
  • BOMB Magazine Self-interview with Arthur Fellig (Summer, 1987).
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Weegee}}

9 : American photojournalists|1899 births|1968 deaths|Artists from New York City|Photographers from New York (state)|Austro-Hungarian emigrants to the United States|People from Zolochiv|Culture of New York City|20th-century American photographers

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