From 30.10.2021 to 10.01.2022
The exhibition Through a Different Lens: Stanley Kubrick photographs the beginnings of a 17-year-old amateur photographer from the Bronx who would become one of the most important filmmakers of the 20th century.
The beginnings
Organised by ERPAC in collaboration with the Museum of the City of New York and the Stanley Kubrick Archive, it features 130 photographs from the Look archive.
All of the images in the exhibition were taken during Kubrick’s employment as a photographer for Look between 1945 and 1950. Kubrick focuses his lens on nightclubs, street scenes and sporting events, capturing the pathos of everyday life with a sophistication that does not show his youth.
The photographs on display are accompanied by the issues of Look in which they appeared, thus restoring the journalistic context in which the images were received by the general public.
Stanley Kubrick sold his first photograph to Look magazine in 1945: the image of a sad newsagent the day after the death of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
For an up-and-coming photographer at that time, there was no better place than New York City. After graduating in 1946, Look hired Kubrick as an apprentice. His name first appeared on the magazine’s masthead in the 7 January 1947 issue. His first photo shoot, ‘Life and Love on the New York Subway’, was published two months later. Particularly valuable for an aspiring filmmaker are the stories devoted to the post-war forms of entertainment in America: publishing, film, popular music and television. In 1950 Kubrick created a series of celebrity profiles, photographing composer and conductor Leonard Bernstein and boxer Rocky Graziano, among others. As his work for the magazine came to an end, Kubrick began work on his first documentary film Day of the Fight. The film, which can be seen in the exhibition and was first shown in 1951, was based on his 1949 article about the boxer Walter Cartier, ‘The Professional’.
Early films
The epilogue to the exhibition highlights the relationship between photographer and director. In 1950 Kubrick made photographic investigations of adolescent love and relationships and marital jealousy. He effectively directed these proto-cinematic series. His first film, the documentary on Cartier, Day of the Fight, is also presented in the exhibition. The script and shots were based on the boxer’s photo shoot. Throughout his life Kubrick relied on photographs to develop the scripts for his stories. The last section of the exhibition also includes an excerpt from his second feature film, Killer’s Kiss (1955) in which we recognise the themes – boxing, crime, nightclubs and showgirls, ambition and alienation – already the subject of his shoots for Look.
Openin hours
Tuesday – Sunday from 10 am to 7 pm
Closed on Monday
Special openings
1 November – 8 December – 24 December closes at 4 p.m.
26 December – 27 December – 31 December closes at 4 p.m.
1 January 2022 opens at 11 a.m. – 3 January
Tickets
Full 8,00€
Reduced 6,00€
65 years and over (with ID)
children from 13 to 18 years of age
students up to 26 years of age
differently abled
Free of charge
– children up to 12 years of age
– group leaders (1 per group)
– visiting teachers with pupils/students (2 per group)
– one accompanying person per disabled person
– ICOM membership card
– journalists with regular membership of the National Association
(professionals, trainees, publicists) in service
upon request of accreditation at: info@magazzinodelleidee.it
The ticket office closes half an hour earlier.
Erpac FVG informs that, as provided for by decree-law no. 221 of last 24 December, from 25 December 2021 until 9 January 2022, for access to museums, exhibition halls and libraries it will be sufficient to be in possession of the ‘basic’ green pass (obtained with vaccination, recovery from the virus or negative swab result in the last 48 hours); while from 10 January 2022 the ‘reinforced’ green pass (obtained only with vaccination and recovery from the virus) will be required. As for the mask, it will be sufficient to wear the surgical mask.