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Annie Leibovitz: People Are Art

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Annie Leibovitz: People Are Art

Born in Westport, Connecticut in 1949, Annie Leibovitz was one of five children born to father, Sam Leibovitz and mother, Marilyn Leibovitz. Her father was a lieutenant in the Air Force, and due to his job the family moved constantly while she was young. She began her career as a journalist for Rolling Stone Magazine in 1970. In 1971 she graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute with a Bachelor's degree in Fine Arts, and two years later, she was elected chief photographer of the magazine; her work has greatly helped to shape its reputation. Later, she left Rolling Stone and began working for other companies such as Vanity Fair and Vogue , while at the same time publishing numerous books; compilations of her photographs. Her unique vision and the content of her photographs have the ability to make bold statements and striking impressions; one of the reasons her work is so popular.

Throughout her career, Annie Leibovitz worked closely with her friend, Susan Sontag, a well-known writer, who died of cancer in 2004. The two were very close, and rumors exist that their relationship was romantic in nature, however the two never admitted anything related to the subject; nonetheless, Sontag greatly influenced Annie Leibovitz' work. She has three children, and has two homes, one in New York City and one on Rhode Island.

She began as a student at the San Francisco Art Institute with the intention of becoming a painter and working as an art teacher. However, after taking a photography class she was enthralled with the process and decided to change her perspective. Her early work is mainly in black and white, but as time progressed she found that she also enjoyed working in color although the process was foreign to her, since she had initially learned photography in black and white. She continued to produce work in both mediums, creating signature scenes with the use of each.

Due to her career as a magazine photographer, Leibovitz has taken advantage of the opportunity to photograph celebrities; including political figures, musicians, athletes and actors, and has thus helped create the surreal, idealistic image that we expect from such people. For example, one of her most famous images is of John Lennon lying next to his wife, Yoko Ono, taken hours before he was killed. In 1975, she was the official concert-tour photographer for the Rolling Stones. She has also taken photographs of Johnny Cash and his family, Norah Jones, Iggy Pop, The White Stripes, and others. Her occasionally outrageous, but always appropriate placements of subjects and props contribute to the sense of personality and artistic embodiment of the individuals in her portraits.

Annie Leibovitz doesn't limit her work to the rich and famous, however; she often shoots photos of average people, making them extraordinary in their

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