DP/30: Finding Vivian Maier with John Maloof & Charlie Siskel

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • When John Maloof bought a box full of negatives about 8 years ago,m he had no idea that it would send him on a journey not only into the undiscovered work of a great photographer, but into an investigation of a life. He teamed up with Charlie Siskel to put it all on film and the duo has brought us one of the great docs about art and process. The duo talked to David Poland about the journey.
    Shot in Los Angeles, March 2014
    Subscribe to DP/30 for more interviews: bit.ly/17Xg4Y1

Комментарии • 58

  • @dungbeetle.
    @dungbeetle. Год назад +2

    It's fortunate that Vivian was a 'hoarder' of sorts, as that's what enabled John to find out so much about her.

  • @marechavala1
    @marechavala1 8 лет назад +10

    John, thanks for bringing this awesome artist's work to light for us, and not taking a completes stranger's negatives to a dumpster instead. You had the option, and did the right thing. :-)

  • @jude999
    @jude999 2 года назад +5

    All credit to John Maloof for his heroic recovery and professional curation. He deserves all the rewards. I would love to see the outtakes. I am surprised that he paid $400 for a just a box of random photographs. "Telling in an artful way" is key.

  • @RicardoRMedina
    @RicardoRMedina 10 лет назад +9

    Very interesting interview. I have to say that its sad that Vivian Maier didnt get to enjoy the fruits of her work which in my opinion as a photographer is very good. This story is very similar to what happened to the French photographer Eugene Atget who's work was discovered after his death in Paris in 1927 by Berenice Abbott.

    • @RicardoRMedina
      @RicardoRMedina 7 лет назад

      I am glad that the negatives ended in good hands for us to see and enjoy. I have one of the books John Maloof published on her photos, superb!

  • @timdavis4099
    @timdavis4099 6 лет назад +5

    Really enjoyed the movie. How is showing her photos hurting her after her death? The negatives would have been lost forever if not for Maloof.

  • @MrDastardly
    @MrDastardly 8 месяцев назад +6

    During the Covid lockdown, I helped my neighbour doing some renovations. He showed me a large metal chest which he said he had since the early 1970’s. In the box were two cameras, over 100 rolls of film, two shoe boxes of letters, some movie reels and maybe 1000 photographs. Old newspapers too. He said they were Vivian Maier’s. I forgot about it until I saw a TV documentary about her life. She is an amazing woman. 👏👏👏👏

    • @lucymisti
      @lucymisti Месяц назад

      Ok… did you contact John? Or print them? Or sell them? Weird to not say..

    • @MrDastardly
      @MrDastardly Месяц назад

      @@lucymisti
      As far as I know, my neighbour still has them in his attic.

  • @sittig904
    @sittig904 10 лет назад +7

    When I hear stories like this the subject of why would she do this in obscurity? Sometimes seeking fame or fortune can ruin the art.

    • @chopin65
      @chopin65 4 года назад +2

      I would say it ruins the artist, for certain.

  • @marshabeatty6589
    @marshabeatty6589 2 года назад +4

    I find it so amazing that you developed the film. Most people wouldn’t have done that

  • @lucymisti
    @lucymisti Месяц назад +1

    She’s an anthropologist unknowingly ❤ she should have written or studied:(

  • @windseafrogs
    @windseafrogs 2 года назад +1

    Seems like her camera was her constant companion, she was never alone, sort of like having a "man on her arm," the camera gave her license to go where singular women dare tread. I think the camera as passport was more important to her than the "postcards as proof of participation." She participated in life as a single woman! Back in the day....

  • @lisbethlarsen6427
    @lisbethlarsen6427 Год назад +2

    Thanks for your efforts to bring her photos to light... Others might not have bothered, or simply not had the resources.

  • @DebbieCombs
    @DebbieCombs 8 лет назад +9

    John Maloof, I commend you for several reasons. As an artist myself, I truly believe that Vivian maybe didn't know how to get her work seen on the level it deserved or that maybe she didn't know if people would think her work was "odd" as they did she. Nothing in me believes that anyone but you, deserves credit for the world being given this gift and that is the mysterious and intriguing life and story and work of Vivian. I believe SHE is eternally grateful to you for preserving what she obviously tried to preserve to her ability....for going out to bat like you have...I thinks he would have bashfully been full of gratitude. And about those cameras you collect......you have inspired me to want a Rollflex box camera and I almost fell over when I saw what they go for. Got any workable cheaperish ones? LOL God I need one so bad......Many blessings

    • @klaytonvonkluge4905
      @klaytonvonkluge4905 6 лет назад +1

      Debra Combs - excellent comment, I agree wholeheartedly. Having seen their documentary several times a few years back, I was (of course) drawn in to the mystery and superb taste for art

  • @lindasarahpoems-jd1ot
    @lindasarahpoems-jd1ot Год назад +1

    If only people paid for storage spaces abandoned due to poverty of the owner.

  • @lindasarahpoems-jd1ot
    @lindasarahpoems-jd1ot Год назад +2

    What I find deeply sad is that Vivian obviously could no longer afford to pay for the storage of her private life - two days after the auction she died. I also think that maybe so many photos were not developed due to her financial circumstances. It's costly to develop film. She had nothing. I sob for her life, her early suffering, for those who pick apart such a private life.

  • @joanneterranova-bickford3854
    @joanneterranova-bickford3854 9 лет назад +9

    Everything happens for a reason.

  • @klartext2225
    @klartext2225 2 года назад +2

    Thanks, both of you, for your fantastic, inspiring film on VM! Inspiring, uplifting, a piece of art in itself.

  • @elizabethfaraone884
    @elizabethfaraone884 10 лет назад +5

    why have MOMA and Tate Modern hired incompetents?

    • @HowdyThere88
      @HowdyThere88 10 лет назад +8

      They don't have an interest in unknown or undiscovered artists. There are just too many, for one thing. Basically, art filters it's way up, with support from dealers and smaller galleries and critical reviews. Once an artist becomes "established" the museums start to think about their work as being "worth owning".
      That's sort of a short answer.

  • @xperience-media7396
    @xperience-media7396 10 лет назад +4

    Here come the lawyers

  • @dingdinglovesart
    @dingdinglovesart 3 месяца назад

    Vivian said. " If you want to take care of someone, take care of me." Obviously that family didn't adopt her. It's hard to say Vivian suffered during her life or not. She had had tough experience, but she peacefully passed when she was 83. The most important thing is, she's got you to take care of her, and her works. I'd say it's both yours, the society's, and Vivian's fortune. Thank you John and your team.

  • @maryloushipmanartdecor1123
    @maryloushipmanartdecor1123 3 месяца назад

    I find this to be one of the most captivating documentaries ever. Vivian's work is brilliant...beautiful, interesting, unusual, and disturbing all in one. John is also amazing in his determination. I am so curious, though....how is such a young person with no steady employment financially capable of all of this? After his museum approaches failed, how was he able to hook up with well-known photographers for their opinions? It's not easy, by any means for an artist to get their foot in the door, let alone be financially capable of pulling off a complete gallery exhibition. Framing, printing, matting all of that work on his own? How?

  • @lucymisti
    @lucymisti Месяц назад

    Exactly how I feel. I’m of the world, but so disconnected in other ways.

  • @samham3901
    @samham3901 3 года назад +1

    Amazing! Great work John .. I can't imagine who could handle vivian story better!!

  • @melizaphotoz
    @melizaphotoz 10 лет назад +2

    She cooked cow tongue! That's barbacoa which is really good!

    • @RViscara
      @RViscara 9 лет назад

      mmm 222 UH not thats cow tongue period... Since when does the meat itself dictate if its bbq or not....

  • @jeffersonzhang118
    @jeffersonzhang118 10 лет назад +2

    Great Vivian Maier!

  • @MrFalconford
    @MrFalconford 9 лет назад +1

    thank you for sharing the work of v m, john and charlie

  • @harryjuselius
    @harryjuselius 8 лет назад +1

    Awesome job great thank youuuuu

  • @lucymisti
    @lucymisti Месяц назад

    Complete independent indeed.

  • @klaytonvonkluge4905
    @klaytonvonkluge4905 6 лет назад +2

    Personally, Ive always liked the way Mr Maloof & Co. brought out the intrigue & mystery that defines V. Maier, and choose to believe they were/ are coming from totally artistic expression and plave...

  • @CamiloHPNunes
    @CamiloHPNunes 5 лет назад

    The subject of it (Vivian) is great but the format that they did it, the camera focused on this two guys constantly speaking makes it such a tiring thing to watch that I didnt make it to the end, so sorry.

  • @YQ2138
    @YQ2138 9 месяцев назад

    HERO👍

  • @jochenreinhardt3504
    @jochenreinhardt3504 2 года назад

    You can see the full Documnetary on Facebook. :-)

  • @KeaJei
    @KeaJei 7 лет назад +1

    Doesn't it seem as though Charlie always try to make a pedestal for John and Vivian (a bit too much)?

  • @Janster59
    @Janster59 9 лет назад

    How do I see this film?

  • @HenryStradford
    @HenryStradford 9 лет назад +7

    DP/30: Finding Vivian Maier with John Maloof & Charlie Siskel
    Gold Diggers! IMHO
    #photography #streetphotography #scammers

    • @joanneterranova-bickford3854
      @joanneterranova-bickford3854 9 лет назад +4

      To bad you didn't find them. I'm sure you would have just handed them over to someone, right? Don't fool your self.

    • @RViscara
      @RViscara 9 лет назад +1

      Joanne Terranova-Bickford Contrary to your spoiled way of thinking there are actually people who do believe morals over money do actually exist. perhaps you dont know them due to your way of thinking which in turn I am sure dictates your circle of friends....

    • @between2worldsradio
      @between2worldsradio 9 лет назад +3

      ***** jealous?

    • @RViscara
      @RViscara 9 лет назад

      Derrick hardly in order to be jealous you would have to think like these two. But then again I am sure this is all over your head for you to grasp.

    • @DebbieCombs
      @DebbieCombs 8 лет назад

      +Derrick Whiteskycloud right?!?!

  • @relinquis
    @relinquis 9 лет назад +2

    the documentary itself would have been much better without having John Maloof in front of the camera so often.

  • @satifaulks
    @satifaulks 10 лет назад

    john maloof = knob

    • @jpracingph
      @jpracingph 9 лет назад +4

      Says the moron

    • @OshZosh
      @OshZosh 9 лет назад +4

      +sati faulks
      If Maloof is a knob, then what does that make the curators from the big galleries who rejected her work? Dickless?

  • @RViscara
    @RViscara 9 лет назад +4

    Personally its sad these guys are making both a name for themselves as well as capitalizing on her efforts as well as profiting from it.... Now these guys are strutting like peacocks off of someone else's hard work. I personally think she would have not liked this as she was pretty private...

    • @MrFalconford
      @MrFalconford 9 лет назад

      Alicia en el pais de las maravillas that's ridiculous, just because v m wasn't franchised doesn't mean it isn't important that's want archeology reveals the worlds and perspectives your not supposed to see because the colonists could care less so they wait till your dead

    • @DebbieCombs
      @DebbieCombs 8 лет назад

      +RViscara
      Disagree.

    • @RicardoRMedina
      @RicardoRMedina 8 лет назад +3

      Don't be so judgmental. If not for them nobody would have heard and much less seen the work of Vivian Meier.