A Photographers Life, quite literally
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A Photographer's Life 1990-2005 is a complex set of images taken by Annie Leibovitz. For Leibovitz the book represents a way to cope with the death of both her father and her lover, Susan Sontag. It is a large and deeply personal set of images that spanned traumatic family events and love lost. Famous for her commercial portraits of Michael Jordan, Yoko Ono, John Lennon, and Bruce Springstein, Leibovitz uses a variety of techniques in this book, ranging from snap shots to well composed images filled with set lighting.
I have a strong appreciation for the book's layout, from single images spread over two pages to small scans of medium format slides applied directly to the page. One of my favorite compositions was a contact sheet of her daughter as she ran around on a spring day.
In the end, though, the layout of the book was chaotic. Though this did convey the complexity of a photographer's entire life, and not just one body of work, it was a huge distraction. Annie Leibovitz's tried to portray her grief through this layout; it conveys chaos and a sense of despaire. She was thinking more about herself than what viewers would think as they flipped through the book. A page depicting a deeply haunting scene from Rwanda, would be followed by a portrait. Leibovitz could have solved this chaos with some organization, quite possibly through chapters from year to year and strict chronology or even better, the separation of editorial, personal, and commercial work. I personally would have preferred to see her photos divided in accordance to subject matter, which I think would strengthen the essence of her work.