Celebrities
Observed -- Sima Ariam: Portraits
Posted 3/26/2003
By Richard
McBee
The difference
between photography as an art form and amateur
snapshots is well defined. One kind of photograph expresses a
complex of
ideas that delve into the human condition, society, politics and
aesthetics,
while the other is simply light-hearted, seeking to capture a moment
of
personal interest.
A personal snapshot is unlikely to evoke the attention of a wide
audience, while a photograph, as a work of art, by its very nature
must
transcend a limited personal perspective. Occasionally, though,
these
distinctions are not as clear as they might seem, especially when
the subjects
are public figures well known in politics and culture. This is the
case in the
current exhibition of Sima Ariam: Portraits: Photographs of Israeli
and American
Cultural Figures at the 92nd Street Y Weill Art Gallery.
Israeli born Sima Ariam is a successful New York City psychologist
who
photographs the denizens of the Jewish and Israeli cultural and
political elite.
They also happen to be her friends and acquaintances. At informal
moments at
various parties and social events over the years, she has compiled
what
amounts to an extended family album on film. These photographs are a
hybrid
between family snapshots and a social document of the movers and
shakers of
the late 20th century Jewish world. The inherent tensions between
these
different forms: photo-documents of famous people, snapshots of
someone
else`s friends and psychological portraits immediately becomes
obvious.
A similar issue arose in the recent "Richard Avedon: Portraits"
exhibition
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The earlier works in the show
were of
celebrities: Einstein, Marilyn Monroe, Charlie Chaplin, and
Eisenhower. In
these images it was difficult to concentrate on the photographic
qualities of the
print because the fame of the individual kept intruding and
distracting from the
aesthetic experience. Later in the exhibition, the subjects are not
famous
individuals. Here, the photograph reasserts itself and the human
personality in
all its complexities becomes the real subject.
Similarly, a recent self-portrait by Avedon stares defiantly at the
viewer,
emphasizing the distinction between the artist and his audience.
In a startling contrast, Sima Ariam`s portrait of Richard Avedon
effectively deconstructs the artist`s image of himself. Here the
artist is
vulnerable, his powerful eyes uncertain and introspective behind
enormous
glasses. Her photograph is revealing and yet tender. It is exactly
this kind of
unexpected image that Ariam strives for in her portraits, capturing
the
unguarded moments of celebrities who seem almost always on guard,
always
protected by their public persona.
Ariam has been photographing her friends and acquaintances for the
last
fifteen years, gaining the praises and accolades of the artists and
celebrities that
she counts as her friends. She works with a simple automatic camera,
frequently utilizing available lighting. Most of the time she shoots
close to her
subjects, avoiding darkroom cropping. Her work is evenly lit,
avoiding
dramatic or evocative lighting in what is a purposefully snapshot
style. As a
psychologist, she has learned to "read" a face and is constantly
looking for the
moment of exposure to peer beneath the public facade of her
subjects.
The double portrait of Gideon Efrat, Israeli art critic, and Aliza
Averbach,
Israel photographer, is one of those candid moments that, perhaps
because this
couple is not familiar to us, begins to crackle with psychological
tension and
possibilities. A shaft of light, coming from the upper left, strikes
his forehead
and continues down his white tie, effectively linking his
silhouetted hand to the
highlights on her cheek and forehead. The natural light provides a
pathway of
meaning that joins action, implied in his hand, with thought and
insight found
in their highlighted brows.
Ariam`s portrait of A.B. Yehoshua, one of the best-known Israeli
writers,
approaches the subject in a more straightforward manner. As we see
in many
of her better known subjects, here the author seems to be openly
greeting the
photographer, welcoming the camera`s gaze and thereby disarming the
viewer
in a flood of warm hospitality. Even though his writings delve into
dark
passions that threaten the civilized facade of most people, the
image of his
head cocked to one side is here disarmingly friendly and curious
about the
viewer. Does he want to get to know us better? To what end? Ariam`s
approach here is playful and familial.
In sharp contrast, the portrait of the iconoclastic American artist
Larry
Rivers carries a different intensity of insight. His sharply turned
head, accented
by his piercing eyes and straining neck muscles evokes the volatile
passion he
was so well known for. Here her work confirms what we already know.
This exhibition of 25 large-scale color prints, each 40 x 30, treads
the
thin line between the personal and the public, wavering between
snapshot and
photograph. As an unabashed amateur, Sima Ariam applies her
psychological
skills to casual images of her friends. The product of her playful
curiosity and
persistent visual explorations is a unique insider`s view of
celebrities observed.
Paradoxically her work increases in complexity and interest the less
we know
visually or intellectually about the subject. This is perhaps the
unavoidable
price celebrities exact from the photographer who dares to intrude
upon the
corridors of power.
Sima Ariam: Portraits ÷ Photographs of Israeli and American Cultural
Figures. 92nd Street Y Weill Art Gallery, 1395 Lexington Avenue, New
York, NY 10128. (212) 415 5500; Sunday ÷ Friday; 12-4 p.m. Also on
view at simaariam.info. Until April 18, 2003.◙
Richard McBee is a painter of Torah subject matter and writer on
Jewish Art.
Please feel free to email him with comments at rmcbee@nyc.rr.com.

Self-Portrait; black and white photograph by Richard Avedon ÷
Courtesy
richardavedon.com

Richard Avedon; color photograph (40 x 30), by Sima Ariam.

Gideon Efrat and Aliza Averbach; color photograph (40 x 30), by Sima
Ariam.

A.B. Yehoshua; color photograph (40 x 30), by Sima Ariam.