2011/09/14

Black & White - Masks, Rites and Transformations I

All great things must first wear terrifying and monstrous masks
in order to inscribe themselves on the hearts of humanity

Friedrich Nietzsche



Irving Penn, Three Asaro Mud Men, New Guinea, 1970





Irving Penn, Two Men in White Masks, Cuzco, Peru, 1948



Chris Rainier, Masked Tatanua Dancers for Malangan Celebration, New Guinea



Walker Evans, African art, Mask with feathers



Roger M. Parry



Cheryl Koralik, Masque Bob, Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso, 1991



Edward Curtis, Masked Dancer Cowichan, 1913



Edward Curtis, Tonenili—Navajo,c.1905



Eliot Elisofon, Belgian Congo, February 1947



Edward Curtis



Ralph Eugene Meatyard



Ralph Eugene Meatyard, Romance from Ambrose Bierce#3, 1962



Arthur Tress



Helen Levitt, New York, children on stoop wearing masks, 1939



Roger Ballen, Wild Child, 2003



Brassaï, Carnival in Frascati, 1954



Diane Arbus,  Untitled, 1970



Edward Curtis, Inuit masks



Hiroshi Watanabe, Kurohige, Naito Clan



Hengki Koentjoro



Kenro Izu, from the exhibition: BHUTAN sacred within



Hiroshi Watanabe, Chujo, Naito Clan





7 comments:

  1. That picture of Arthur Tress.. I've seen it before but didn't know who had to be credited for such a beautiful photo!

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  2. I keep coming back to the sole unmasked person here in Parry's photograph - found myself appreciating her warm smile amongst the alien, kind of unsettling faces these masks have. Although, Meatyard and Tress' photographs are kinda funny in their cartoonishness! (The man in the left of Meatyard's first photo has a sinister quality to him, though...)

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  3. @madrigual: I had also seen the photo in various places without any credit, before I finally found out that it's from Arthur Tress. It's indeed a wonderful children's portrait.

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  4. Thank you, Vincent. I wasn't aware how much this sole smiling human face stands out in this collection until you pointed me to it. The interesting aspect about the photos from Meatyard is, that the people he portraits are mostly friends and relatives. An indeed sinister way to point out how close we are to our demons. At least I like to look at it that way ;)

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  5. I am obsessed with your blog. You've curated such a fun place here.

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  6. Thank you, chelseas! Glad you're sharing some of my obsessions :)

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  7. I also found your blog while trying to ID that Tress photo (thanks for clearing that up), but I think the whole page is great. Finding common ground between things like the Tress and Meatyard and Arbus with Curtis's 100-year-old shots of tribal masks is really inspired. Great how you also pulled in things like that rather haunting Helen Levitt photo.

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