Andre de Dienes image of Marilyn Monroe, North of Malibu, California, 1946
Gelatin silver print, printed ca. 1965
14 x 11 in
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Proving once again the enduring allure of
all things Norma Jeane/Marilyn Monroe-- even 54 years after her possible
murder--the Steven Kasher Gallery is in the midst of a photographic exhibition called “Andre de
Dienes: Marilyn and California Girls.”
Kasher staffers say it is the first solo
show of photographer Andre de Dienes in New York in more than ten years. The show opened in June and closes July 30,
2016 at 515 West 26th Street, Manhattan.
The exhibition features more than 50
lifetime prints from de Dienes’ two most famous series, Marilyn Monroe and
California nudes. In 1945, De Dienes (1913-1985) was the first professional
photographer to photograph Marilyn when she was just a model named Norma Jeane
Baker. One of Marilyn’s first lovers, de Dienes was an intimate of Marilyn and
photographed her privately in 1945, 1946, 1949 and 1953. His iconic photographs
capture her transformation from sensitive and ambitious ingénue into Marilyn
Monroe troubled star.
The exhibition will also highlight de
Dienes’ avant-garde nudes. Like many West Coast photographers, including Ansel
Adams, Edward Weston and Brett Weston, de Dienes was fascinated by the desert
landscape. With his nudes in landscapes he experimented with double exposure
and photomontage. His nudes sometimes take on uncanny postures reminiscent of
Hans Bellmer’s Dolls.
Albeit the fiery tempered East European was
in love with Norma Jeane, he never took nude images of her.
In November 1945 de Dienes was a successful
New York fashion photographer. He moved temporarily to Hollywood. His first
task was to find a model for his experimental nude photography. De Dienes
called numerous modeling agencies until an agency sent over a young lady who
had been camping out in the office, eager to get her start in Hollywood. It was
Norma Jeane Baker, a 19-year-old “miracle” and “sexy looking angel” as de
Dienes wrote in his 1983 memoir. It was love at first sight. De Dienes didn’t
take any nude photographs of young Norma Jeane, but invited her on a five-week
trip. Though the trip resulted in a brief marital engagement, de Dienes
returned to New York and their romance did not withstand the distance.
When he returned to California some months
later, de Dienes found that the young and innocent model he knew as Norma Jeane
had been made over into the coy budding actress Marilyn Monroe. Still fascinated
by Marilyn’s expressive face, he asked her to accompany him to a beach in
Malibu to take photographs for a book of poetry and philosophy he wanted to
illustrate. The rare large scale photographs he made in 1946 depict Marilyn
acting out various moods including happiness, introspection, serenity and
sadness.
In the summer of 1949, Marilyn’s star began
to rise. While in New York for the first time she called de Dienes and said
“Andre, let’s take pictures again! Let’s make history! Do you have a nice
bathing suit I can wear?” When he picked her up at the Pierre hotel, he
discovered “a magnificent, elegant young woman, sophisticated like [he had]
never seen her before.” But de Dienes preferred “a very casual Marilyn” for his
pictures. He took her out of the craziness of the city to Tobay Beach on Long
Island. Once on the beach she let go of her new sex-pot persona and returned to
the innocent girl de Dienes first met, laughing and playing in front of the
camera.
Their last shoot together happened late one
night in 1953. Marilyn phoned de Dienes and told him she could not sleep. She
proposed that they meet to take pictures somewhere in a dark valley in Beverly
Hills. Without a flash or professional lighting, he lit Marilyn’s face with the
headlight of his car. She posed sad and lonely. This was the first time that de
Dienes came face to face with the dark side of Marilyn. De Dienes stayed in
touch with Marilyn until her death in 1962, but never photographed her again
after 1953.
Andre de Dienes was born in 1913 in what is
now Romania. After arriving in Paris in 1933, he became a photographer for the
Communist newspaper L’Humanité. He began working as a fashion photographer for
Parisian couturiers and moved to New York in 1938 with the help of Esquire magazine
editor Arnold Gingrich. In New York he photographed for Esquire, Vogue and
Life. In 1951, de Dienes moved to Hollywood and began to photograph movie stars
and to experiment with nudes and landscapes. His memoir Marilyn Mon Amour was
published in 1985. In 2002, Taschen published de Dienes monumental monograph
simply titled Marilyn. In addition, 24 books of his nudes have been published.
Andre de Dienes: Marilyn and California
Girls will be on view June 9th – July 30th, 2016. Steven Kasher Gallery is located
at 515 W. 26th St., New York, NY 10001. Gallery hours are Tuesday through
Saturday, 10 AM to 6 PM.
From Kasher Gallery Press Materials:
In November 1945 Andre de Dienes, a fashion
photographer with a penchant for nude photography, moved to the Garden of Allah
Hotel in Beverly Hills. His goal was to find models to photograph nude in the
desert landscape for a new artistic project.
He phoned Emmeline Snively, the
no-nonsense, self-made woman behind Hollywood’s Blue Book Modeling Agency
looking for a fresh face. Snively had just signed a determined 19 year old
named Norma Jeane Dougherty. Norma Jeane was an orphan whose tenacity and
girl-next-door appeal Snively took a special interest in. She told de Dienes
she wasn’t sure the girl would agree to pose for nudes but that she was eager
for more work and experience.
Norma Jeane arrived at his hotel that
afternoon. In his memoir de Dienes says, “It was as if a miracle had happened
to me. From the instant I looked at her and we began to talk, her voice, her
smile and her beautiful blue eyes… Norma Jeane seemed to be like an angel…an
earthly, sexy-looking angel sent expressly for me!” The next day he took Norma
Jeane to Paradise Cove, a secluded beach north of Malibu, and took his first
photographs of her. These are some of the earliest professional photographs of
the would-be star. He was instantly charmed by her vitality and enthusiasm and “wanted
to take her away from Hollywood right away on a long trip. Just go with her,
everywhere! I felt completely enamored by her!”
There was only one problem, Norma Jeane was
married. Though separated from her merchant marine husband and living with her
former foster parent, “Aunt Ana”, the Dougherty family was not pleased with
thought of their son’s wife going off with a brash Hungarian photographer. De
Dienes knew he had to do some convincing if he was going to live out his
fantasy. The next day during lunch with Norma Jeane and “Aunt Ana” he put his
European charm to work. He regaled the two with his stories of photographing
Hollywood stars including Shirley Temple and Ingrid Bergman. He offered to pay
Norma Jeane $100 per week for posing on the trip, plus all expenses, including
buying outfits for her to wear and all the food she could eat.
In the days that followed, de Dienes
removed the backseat of his Buick Roadmaster and laid down a sheet of thick
foam rubber. He covered it in blankets and pillows so Norma Jeane could sleep
during the long drives, jokingly referring to it as her “little cage”.
According to de Dienes, “Norma Jeane laughed like crazy when I told her she
would become my little slave and prisoner, that I might even buy a long thin chain
to attach one end of to her ankle and
the other end to the car!”
Their first destination was Death Valley
where de Dienes planned to photograph the young model nude near Darwin Falls.
When they arrived he simply couldn’t go through with it. He was already in love
with her but too shy to ask her to expose herself to him for the first time out
in the open. During their two week long journey, de Dienes fell madly in love.
His 1983 memoirs recall his desire, “The
good old sex drive motivated me, Norma Jeane must have sensed it right away.”
Overcome with lust, he made several attempts to charm the young model into bed
with him, once even knocking on her door in the middle of the night, prompting
her to tell him to remain a “good boy” and return to his cabin. They traveled
through California, Nevada, Arizona and Oregon. Looking at the photographs, one
can see why de Dienes fell for her so hard and so fast.
Though taken well before her
studio-developed sex-pot persona, Norma Jeane innocently flirts with the
camera. She beams at us in the desert and mountain landscape, her white teeth
and ginger hair shining. Her outfits, from farm-girl to ski-bunny, are as
naughty as they are innocent.
De Dienes’ budding affection in Norma Jeane
wasn’t the only issue they encountered. They were chased through the desert by
two would-be robbers, they paid a disastrous visit to Norma Jeane’s estranged
mother Gladys who had just been released from a mental facility in Portland,
they lost a host of photographic equipment to thieves during a storm and were
pulled over by police who joked that they would drop the ticket if Norma Jeane
would spend the night at the station.
One evening, stranded in a snowstorm near
Mt. Hood, Oregon, the two wound up at the Government Lodge. The concierge
informed them that there was only one room left. After two weeks of insisting
on separate cabins Norma Jeane said “Let’s take the room, let’s not worry any
more about anything!”
Finally in the same bed, de Dienes made his move. As de
Dienes recalls “We went to bed without the slightest nervousness, as if what
was happening was the most natural thing in the world. It was a strange
contrast to all the days of amorous emotions I had to fight…It felt like being
in heaven. Sensuality, sexuality, idealism all mixed with tension…a marvelous
combination of the self and the mind, a fantastic poetic feeling of sensuous
desires and mental processes of the soul until the ultimate climax of an
orgasm. The passion lasted for several hours. It was poetry and reality all
mixed! [Afterwards] Norma Jeane was hugging me, I was kissing her tears. She
said she had never had an orgasm before in her life. Young love, clashed in
complete sincerity, was the end result that night. Why couldn’t I have made her
pregnant? I asked myself ever after.”
The next day, de Dienes professed his love
to her and promised they would be married as soon as she was divorced. They
lounged carefree in the room, leaving only for one hour to take photographs of
Norma Jeane on the snowy mountain. De Dienes had finally caught a glimpse of
the “…sexy little vampire [she was], the future Marilyn was there in that room!
A sex symbol was incubating that afternoon!” Shortly after, de Dienes received
word that a friend in New York had died. He returned Norma Jeane to L.A. and
went back to New York, convinced their engagement would last.
The photographs he took on their trip
landed Norma Jeane her first magazine covers. She quickly became one of the
most in demand and successful models at the Blue Book Modeling Agency. In the
summer of 1946, De Dienes called and told her he was returning to L.A. and that
they could finally get married. Though she had great affection for him, the
movie studio that had just signed her wanted her to remain single until she
built up her career. She broke the news to him saying, “Andre, please don’t
come, I can’t marry you! I want to become an actress!” Determined to be a
Hollywood star, a second marriage was not part of her plan.
On Labor Day 1946, Norma Jeane called de
Dienes to her apartment. She told him she had a new name and in her flowery
script wrote out Marilyn Monroe. De Dienes took the newly named Marilyn again
to a deserted beach. After reading from a book of philosophical poetry, Marilyn
posed for de Dienes interpreting various moods. In these photographs we see a
bare-faced Marilyn embodying happiness, pensiveness, introspection, serenity,
sadness and even death. When acting out death, she looks solemnly and painfully
at the ground. When de Dienes asked her why her face appeared tormented in
death instead of calm and peaceful, she insisted that was how she imagined her
death.
In 1949, while in New York on a publicity
tour for “Love Happy”, Marilyn called de Dienes. She said “Andre, Let’s take
pictures again! Let’s make history!” After buying her two swimsuits and two
parasols, he drove her to the isolated Tobay Beach in Long Island. In these
photographs, Marilyn adores the camera almost as much as it adores her.
Scampering confidently and joyfully on the beach, hair golden, skin luminous,
body ripened, she is on the brink of stardom and feels it. These photographs
show her startling transformation from shy Norma Jeane into sex kitten Marilyn.
In 1949 or 1950, the aspiring actress overheard someone at a party call her a “chinless
wonder”, she secretly went under the knife, postponing a screen test claiming
that she had fallen on her chin. When she finally took the screen test, the
director said “Honey, you should have cut your chin two years ago.” It is
unknown whether these photos were taken before or after her surgery.
In 1950, de Dienes moved permanently to
Hollywood and he and Marilyn forged a very successful working relationship. In
1952, de Dienes was assigned to photograph her for Pageant magazine. The now
world-renown star sent her team away from her Bel Air Hotel bungalow to be
alone with de Dienes. She posed for him suggestively wrapped in a towel and
taking a bubble bath, playing every bit the “Blonde Heat”, but he also
photographed her casually reading scripts in bed, exercising and going about
her daily life. These photographs express their intimate friendship and her
trust in him as a photographer and confidante.
Later, more troubling sides of Marilyn
emerged. At 2:30am one morning in 1953, suffering from insomnia, Marilyn called
de Dienes and proposed that he take pictures of her in a dark alleyway.
Lighting her only with the headlights of his car, the photographs show us a sad
and forlorn Marilyn. De Dienes wrote, “Was she just playing a melodrama in
those pictures, or was she conscious that something was wrong in her life, that
something tragic would happen to her?” These haunting images are the last
photographs de Dienes would ever take of her.
Though they remained friends as she
catapulted to stardom, de Dienes’ temper put a strain on their relationship.
Always thinking of his early photographs as the turning point in her career, in
1960 he sent her two letters berating her for never acknowledging him for
launching her to fame. On June 1, 1961, her birthday, de Dienes visited Marilyn
at the Beverly Hills Hotel. The meeting ended in cross words and de Dienes’
stormed out of her hotel. It was the last meeting between de Dienes and his
“little mushroom”.
In 1962, while preparing a pitch for Life
magazine, de Dienes decided to dig up boxes of negatives, prints, articles and
letters which he had buried ten years earlier when his photo laboratory was
severely damaged in a storm. To his surprise the unpublished negatives from
their early shoots remained mostly intact. A few weeks later, on August 5,
1962, De Dienes heard on the radio that Marilyn was found dead in her Brentwood
home. Over the next ten years, de Dienes made the first prints of these
never-before-seen photographs. In these prints, his lifelong obsession is
revealed again. His final prints of Marilyn are a series of surreal idolatry,
superimposing her face onto sunsets, seascapes, nightscapes, and beds of
flowers.
By the 1970s Andre de Dienes, once a hot
headed fixture of Hollywood, became a recluse. Though he published over 20
books of his photographs of nudes, he buried his final prints of Marilyn in his
garage and never showed them to anyone. They would remain undiscovered for 20
years. Five years after his death in 1985, his wife Shirley, discovered them
along with his memoirs. De Dienes might have been forgotten entirely were it
not for the efforts of his widow, Shirley T. Ellis de Dienes, and Steve Crist,
who together worked to bring the Norma Jeane archive back into the public eye.
These rare lifetime prints will be on view
in the exhibition Andre de Dienes: Marilyn and California Girls, at Steven
Kasher Gallery June 9th – July 29th, 2016.
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