Irving Penn. Artists Portraits

© Irving Penn

Irving Penn, Salvador Dalí, 1947

Villa les Roches Brunes

Curated by
Matthieu Humery
Lola Regard

From June to October 2023, Pinault Collection and the City of Dinard have renewed their collaboration to present the exhibition “Irving Penn. Artists Portraits. Photographs from the Pinault Collection”. After an initial exhibition in 2009 at the Palais des Arts titled “Who’s Afraid of Artists?”, featuring a selection of works from the Pinault Collection, it was with great enthusiasm that François Pinault accepted a new proposal from the City of Dinard to exhibit a selection of photographs at Villa Les Roches Brunes, a sprawling Belle Époque residence located in the heart of the city.

An artist’s artist, Irving Penn first studied painting, an approach he would then apply to construct his still lives and plumb the psychological depths of his subjects. Devoid of any flourish or decoration, his studio consisted of an old theatre curtain, a stool, or at most an armchair draped with a ragged, heavy fabric – this is all Irving Penn would provide people when photographing them. Away from their studios and off-stage, the artists appear without tools, instruments, entourages, or fanfare of any kind. It was through this process of stripping things down to an almost minimalist core that he would portray his subjects, ultimately yielding portraits of an unprecedented existential depth. The bareness of the setting and Irving Penn’s graphic conciseness uncovered the psyche of each of his subjects with the utmost delicacy. His influence on the art of photography was widely felt. Simplicity, light, construction, and distance were the magic formula that the artist concocted to reveal people and objects on glossy paper.