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Mike Disfarmer

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Name
  
Mike Disfarmer

Role
  
Photographer

Mike Disfarmer MIKE DISFARMER 39DISFARMER PORTRAITS39 ASX
Died
  
1959, Heber Springs, Arkansas, United States

Disfarmer: A Portrait of America (Accessible Preview)


Mike Disfarmer (1884-1959) was an American photographer whose portraits of everyday people in rural Arkansas became regarded as art some years after his death.

Contents

Mike Disfarmer View buy Disfarmer black and white photographs of rural

Born Mike Meyer, he changed his surname to "Disfarmer" possibly to break with his family's agrarian roots, the first move in a maverick career that embraced both obscurity and a rigorous aesthetic. Disfarmer maintained a portrait studio in his hometown of Heber Springs, Arkansas, and photographed members of the local community for small fees. But his "penny portraits" were far more than mere keepsake photographs. Employing a stark realism and often lengthy, unnervingly mute sitting sessions, Disfarmer produced a consistent stream of portraits that, according to some, strip his subjects into an uncanny intimacy. His photographs are said by some to capture the essence of a particular community in a particular time with piercing solemnity and a touching simplicity. His reclusive lifestyle has left many details of his life obscure or uncertain.

A large cache of negatives shot by Disfarmer were found in the 1970s in Heber Springs by Peter Miller who spent a year on a bicentennial grant cleaning, preserving and cataloging the negatives. Subsequently, two exhibitions of Disfarmer's own prints were held.

Mike Disfarmer Mike Disfarmer flyeschoolcom

In 2008, a picture of Disfarmer was used on the 80th Academy Awards telecast as the alleged portrait of Roderick Jaynes, the film editing pseudonym of the Coen brothers, who was nominated at that ceremony for editing the Coens' film No Country for Old Men. Disfarmer's photo was supplied to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences by the Coens after Jaynes' nomination.

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In 2009, he was the subject of a puppet-theater production by Dan Hurlin, premiered at St. Ann's Warehouse in New York City. His life was an inspiration for guitarist Bill Frisell, who was commissioned by the Wexner Center for the Arts to write the score to accompany a retrospective of Disfarmer's work. Frisell visited Disfarmer's home town of Heber Springs, Arkansas and created an album "Disfarmer".

Mike Disfarmer wwwdisfarmercomimagesinteriordisfarmermiked

His gravesite has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Disfarmer (Trailer)


Books

Mike Disfarmer MIKE DISFARMER quotDisfarmer Rediscoveredquot ASX AMERICAN
  • Disfarmer, Mike. Disfarmer: The Heber Springs Portraits, 1939–1946. Addison House
  • Disfarmer, Mike, Steven Kasher, and Alan Trachtenberg. Original Disfarmer Photographs. Gottingen: Steidl, 2005
  • Disfarmer, Mike. Herber Springs Portraits: Continuity and Change in the World Disfarmer Photographed. University of New Mexico Press

  • Mike Disfarmer Mike Disfarmer time machine
    Mike Disfarmer Threepenny Gallery Fall 1998

    References

    Mike Disfarmer Wikipedia