Place: Yonkers
Born: 1911
Death: 2002
Biography:
George Daniell was an American photographer whose portfolio includes memorable studies of actors, writers and artists. He was born on May 4, 1911 in Yonkers, New York, and it was this early life amidst the dramatic, expansive and open landscape of his childhood that shaped his attachment to cinematic qualities of black-and-white photography. He trained as a painter at Yale and later at Arts Students League in New York where he first began working as a freelance photographer, shooting for publications like Times, Esquire and Life. Many of the renowned subjects he photographed were his friends such as John Marin, Berenice Abbott and Tennessee Williams. During the 1940s he developed a lasting friendship with Georgia O’Keeffe of whom he took a series of intimate portraits while visiting her Ghost Ranch in Abiquiu, New Mexico. The images offered an arresting insight into the secluded life of one of the first female American modernists. Daniell travelled across the country and around the world with his camera and it was during these excursions that he spent several months at the infamous Cinecittà Studios in Rome, taking striking black-and-white photographs of the blooming beauty of young Sophia Loren, and Audrey Hepburn on the set of ''War and Peace”. These portraits are marked by a distinct sense of sensuality and convey a deep-rooted interest in his subjects, constituting some of his most iconic and recognizable works. He was not just a celebrity photographer however, taking a keen interest in a variety of subjects throughout his life. For him the pictures of dock workers in New Brunswick, crabbers on the Hudson, swimmers at Glen Island Beach, and fishermen off the coast of Maine were all equally important as those of Hollywood stars.