In & Out of Fashion: The Films of William Klein

Film Retrospective and Regis Dialogue ![]() |
Sorry, this part of the page requires flash.
|
|
|
William Klein has spent six decades producing works that are raw, direct, and confrontational. As an artist, he has resisted categorization and worked within and across many mediums. His vision embraces a moral conscience and a passion for discord, and his films fall into two disparate but complementary categories: eviscerating social satires and illuminating documentaries. It is mostly through the latter that he betrays his fascination with outsiders—both heroes and outlaws.
Born in 1928 into a Jewish family living in an Irish neighborhood in New York, Klein grew up alienated from mainstream culture. After two years overseas in the U.S. army, he was discharged in France, where he has lived and worked since 1948. His varied career has included studying painting with Fernand Léger at the Sorbonne and shooting fashion spreads for U.S. Vogue. His book New York (Life Is Good & Good for You in New York: Trance Witness Revels) (1956) broke many photographic rules and changed the medium; street photography flourished in its wake. . . .
Born in 1928 into a Jewish family living in an Irish neighborhood in New York, Klein grew up alienated from mainstream culture. After two years overseas in the U.S. army, he was discharged in France, where he has lived and worked since 1948. His varied career has included studying painting with Fernand Léger at the Sorbonne and shooting fashion spreads for U.S. Vogue. His book New York (Life Is Good & Good for You in New York: Trance Witness Revels) (1956) broke many photographic rules and changed the medium; street photography flourished in its wake. . . .
view full text
Related Links
The Ins and Outs of William Klein
http://blogs.walkerart.org/filmvideo/2009/05/11/the-ins-and-outs-of-william-klein/
Walker blogs, Film and Video: Books


Unearthed William Klein trailers
http://blogs.walkerart.org/filmvideo/2009/05/14/unearthed-william-klein-trailers/
Walker blogs, Film and Video: Books










