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Faux Fur
By Joanne Laurier
2 December 2006
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Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus, directed
by Steven Shainberg, screenplay by Erin Cressida Wilson, inspired
by Diane Arbus: A Biography by Patricia Bosworth
Another thing is a photograph has to be specific. ...
[T]he more specific you are, the more general itll be.
American photographer Diane Arbus (1923-1971)
Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus by filmmaker
Steven Shainberg combines real details of the life of famed photographer
Diane Arbus with a fictional storyline and invented characters.
In the films opening segment, Diane (Nicole Kidman) is
requesting permission from a naked, middle-aged couple to photograph
their nudist colony. When asked to remove her clothes, she replies,
Give me a minute. The film essentially takes place
in this minute as it backtracks to the moment of Arbuss
transformation from repressed and sheltered housewife to celebrated
photographer of the marginalized and even grotesque.
Retiring and angst-ridden, Diane is ripe for an encounter with
her masked neighbor, Lionel (Robert Downey Jr.), whose face and
body are covered with hair due to the disease hypertrichosis.
Lionels unorthodox appearance and habits inspire her to
begin using her Rolleiflex camera, a hitherto unused device bought
for her years ago by husband Allan (Ty Burrell). Lionel sets off,
then nurtures Arbuss attraction to the apparently freakish.
Her increasing obsession with the afflicted man and his nether
world of dwarfs, giants and other abnormal types alienates Diane
from the only existence she has ever known. The consequences are
painfuland irreversible.
Fur is praiseworthy if for no other reason than the
fact it brings this pioneering artist back into the public eye.
Previous efforts to make a film about Arbuss life have failed.
Shainberg had the good fortune to have grown up with Arbuss
work, as she was a close friend of the directors uncle,
Lawrence Shainberg.
Intelligent and sensitive, Shainbergs film seeks to answer
the following question: why at the age of 35 did Arbus leave her
husband, break up their successful commercial photography team
and turn her back on her parents and a privileged milieu? As an
exploration of this period in Arbuss life, the film is intended
to encourage tolerance for what is often viewed as peculiar and
obsessive behavior. It performs the task with a degree of skill
and beauty, although talented actors like Downey Jr. bring more
of the spirit of Arbuss life and work to the screen
than the letter of a not always coherent or plausible script
would initially seem to offer.
It would be understandable if contemporary filmgoers were intrigued
by Fur and its rather exotic subject matter. However, the
reality only partially revealed by Shainbergs film is so
much more suggestive. (See a number of photos, for example, here.)
Indeed Furs major shortcoming is its tendency
to take shortcuts in its effort to understand the photographer,
her period and her life. The director rejects, as he puts it in
an interview, the slavish recreation of the literal biographical
narrative, choosing instead to dramatize metaphorically
his interpretation of Arbuss inner life. Unfortunately,
he does so by reductively treating complex artistic problems,
primarily through the catch-all character of Lionel.
In an interview with The Evening Class, Shainberg describes
Lionel as a psychological, emotional and artistic composite of
Arbuss mentors, photographer Lisette Model and painter and
editorial art director Marvin Israel, as well as all the
freaks she eventually photographed. In the first place,
employing such a plot mechanism as a substitute for delineating
real, concrete influences simply confuses matters. Arbus lived
and breathed at a specific moment in history, as well as in a
definite cultural milieu. Her art and her psyche were bound up
with those phenomena.
Dianes relationship with Lionel is so all-encompassing,
says the director, that it contains the possibility of her future
suicide. One of the things hes teaching her is that
taking the risk that shes about to take, discovering herself,
making this change in her life, requires an experience of a connection
to her own potential death. This is peculiar. It makes Argus
the entirely passive recipient of influences, which was hardly
the case. What was her role in the development of her own art?
Historical accuracy has never been the forte of biographical
filmsbiopicsproduced by the American film industry.
Fur, although something of an independent work, is no exception
in its determined avoidance of the contradictory character of
post-war America, the explosive combination of relative economic
prosperity and psychic dysfunction so obviously present in Arbuss
work.
One does not have to be an expert in Arbuss work to sense
the deep and startling intensity of her photos. Such things do
not come out of the blue. Arbus came from a highly cultured New
York Jewish family. Her brother, Howard Nemerov, became a well-known
poet.
Contrary to Shainbergs rather simplistic explanation
for her emergence as an artist, Arbus steeped herself in the history
of photography. Patricia Bosworths Diane Arbus: A Biography
reveals that she began a study of the field at its very origins,
the worlds first photograph taken by Joseph Niepce (circa
1826). She liked Balzacs theory regarding the invention
of the daguerreotype: that every human being in his natural state
is made up of a series of superimposed images which the camera
peels away, writes Bosworth.
Arbus studied nineteenth century portraiture and the documentation
of Civil War battlefields. She would read about Paul Strands
switch from pictorialism to Cubist-inspired photographs in the
1920s; she would study Lewis Hiness powerful pictures of
children working in coal mines. [Photographer John Szarkowski
notes: Her most frequent subject in fact was childrenperhaps
because of their individuality is purerless skillfully concealedcloser
to the surface.] Hiness bleak images would impress
her more than [Alfred] Stieglitz gorgeous formations.
Shainberg speaks of the mystery of her inner life.
Everyones has an element of mystery, but Arbuss becomes
somewhat less so when one actually takes a look at her interests
and concerns, including this rigorous study of her art form.
A cursory consideration of her life (including her suicide
in 1971 at the age of 48) and work suggests that this was someone
capable of devoting herself to a great cause, including the cause
of art, with determination, self-sacrifice and personal honesty.
However, artists dont choose their dates of birth. Arbus
came to artistic maturity under difficult conditions: a stultifying
post-war boom with its attendant anti-communism, and the rise
of a complacent and conformist middle class.
[S]he responded to the work of her contemporaries Louis
Faurer and Robert Frank, who were experimenting with outrageous
cropping and out-of-focus imagery. But Diane was even more impressed
by Lisette Models studies of grotesques, especially the
grotesques of poverty and old age which she documented with almost
clinical detachment, writes Bosworth.
Arbuss attraction to the unusual is not as inexplicable
as Shainbergs film suggests. (This attraction is particularly
intriguing in light of her previous engagement in the artifice
of fashion photography, with its perfect bodies and faces.) Most
people go through life dreading theyll have a traumatic
experience. Freaks are born with their trauma. Theyve already
passed it, Arbus famously said. No doubt there were personal
traumas in her life, but is it so hard to think of other, generalized
traumas that might work on the mind of a sensitive artist in the
mid-twentieth century, events that left individuals or entire
peoples mutilated, events that she might have felt had left her
a freak?
Attracted to the margins of society, Arbus was not in economic
or ideological circumstances that permitted her to reproduce the
social realist work of the 1930s. Artistic circles had abandoned
Marxism for psychoanalysis, as one commentator has put it.
And the population itself had changed. Arbus attempted to respond
to the artistic challenges of her day. If there is a one-sidedness
in her work, an obsession with the misshapen or bizarre at the
expense of other aspects of life, one has to take into account
the generally stunted atmosphere in which she worked.
Fur succumbs to filmmakings present-day tendency
toward vulgar psychologizing, particularly pertaining to Dianes
childhood. As Bosworth explains, the reality was richer. Far from
her photography being an accidental occurrence (within the films
framework, what if Diane had never met Lionel?), Arbus picked
up her camera at a time when photojournalism in the 1950s, which
was the height of the large-format, mass-circulation magazine,
was a visual medium of immense power and influence, often
defining the way people saw the world.
Furthermore, with all its limitations (and circumscribed now
by what postwar American society permitted the artist to say),
Greenwich Village and Lower East Side in Manhattan offered a varied
artistic and intellectual life in which Arbus participated fully.
She was acquainted with the important painters, writers and intellectual
figures of the day. Among those with whom she became friends was
the legendary photographer Walker Evans. About Arbus, Evans wrote,
This artist is daring, extremely gifted, and a born huntress.
There may be something naïve about her work if there is anything
naïve about the devil.
This side of Arbuss work, along with the impulses driving
it, is largely missing from Shainbergs well-intentioned
Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus.
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