Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein photographed by Burt Glinn, 1965
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Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein photographed by Burt Glinn, 1965
Andy Warhol with Gerard Malanga, Edie Sedgwick, Chuck Wein, Billy Name, and Larry Latreille at the Factory in New York City, 1965.
Photos by David McCabe
Edie Sedgwick Andy Warhol Chuck Wein
Vogue 1965
Photo: Burt Glinn
photo: Burt Glinn, 1965
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein by Burt Glinn, 1965.
Edie Sedgwick, Chuck Wein & Andy Warhol in New York 1965 ''Underground Filmmakers'' Photographer Burt Glinn Newest Cool
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein, New York, 1965 © Burt Glinn/Magnum Photos. Left: published photograph. Right: "reproductions of the darkroom printer’s test prints, complete with his mark-ups and notations", from the Magnum Darkroom Collection:
To the untrained eye, they appear something like an artistic intervention. But these scrawlings are in fact his own guidelines, revealing complex formulas and how he intends to ‘dodge and burn’ selected areas of the image as it is projected from a negative in an enlarger onto the surface of the print. The various numbers refer to the different exposure times he intends to use on portions of the image as he compensates for the imperfections of the original. The facsimile prints in the collection therefore reveal an analog history — how depth and layers are accentuated through the printing process; how the subject is brought to life. They are also a testimony to the eye of the printer and the intimate art of darkroom magic.
They're also a useful counterpoint to the idea that pre-digital photography is less edited or more pure, such as this sentence:
Remember, Penn shot long before Photoshop could magically touch up our flaws. The perfection of his analog photos is in the light, the composition and the shadows.
Irving Penn spent several years creating a new platinum printing technique, so I don't think it's unrealistic to expect that he also did darkroom edits. (He wasn't a Magnum photographer, so the proof of work isn't going to be as clear as it is for Glinn, Dennis Stock, or Bruce Gilden, all of whim have prints on Magnum's store.)
The past wasn't necessarily better just because creativity didn't get processed through computers somewhere along the line.
Andy Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and Chuck Wein posing in a manhole on East 58th Street in Manhattan's Sutton Place🥀🍂🥀
📸 Burt Glinn (1965)
A photo from this photoshoot appeared in the February 13, 1966 issue of The Sunday Times Magazine🥀🍂
Via Flower Power “60” FB🍂