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Ruth Orkin

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Full Name
  
Ruth Orkin

Children
  
Mary Engel, Andy Engel

Role
  
Photographer

Name
  
Ruth Orkin

Nationality
  
American


Ruth Orkin wwworkinphotocomorkinpresswpcontentuploads2

Born
  
September 3, 1921 (
1921-09-03
)

Known for
  
Photography, filmmaking

Notable work
  
American Girl in Italy (1951), Little Fugitive (1952), Lovers and Lollipops (1955)

Website
  
Ruth Orkin Photo Archive

Died
  
January 16, 1985, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Morris Engel (m. 1952–1985)

Movies
  
Little Fugitive, Lovers and Lollipops

Books
  
A world through my window, A photo journal, More pictures from my window

Similar People
  
Morris Engel, Richie Andrusco, Jay Williams, Will Lee, Lori March

Ruth orkin an everyday life photographer


Ruth Orkin (September 3, 1921 – January 16, 1985) was a self-taught award-winning American photographer, photojournalist, and filmmaker, with ties to New York City and Hollywood. She is best known for her photograph An American Girl in Italy (1951), and has photographed many celebrities and personalities including Lauren Bacall, Doris Day, Ava Gardner, Tennessee Williams, Marlon Brando, and Alfred Hitchcock.

Contents

Ruth Orkin Ruth Orkin Photo Archive

The story of one picture: American Girl in Italy 1951 (Ruth Orkin photographer))


Life

Ruth Orkin Biography Ruth Orkin Photo Archive

Ruth Orkin was born on September 3, 1921 in Boston, Massachusetts to Mary Ruby and Samuel Orkin. Ruth grew up in Hollywood, due to her mother's career as a silent film actress. In 1931, she received her first camera, a 39-cent Unisex, and soon began experimenting by taking photographs of her friends and teachers at school. At the age of 17, she decided to bike across America, beginning in Los Angeles, and ending in New York City for the 1939 World's Fair. She completed the trip in three weeks' time, taking photographs along the way.

Ruth Orkin Ruth Orkin das referncias fotogrficas

She briefly attended Los Angeles City College for photojournalism in 1940, prior to becoming the first messenger girl at MGM Studios in 1941, citing a desire to become a cinematographer. She left the position after discovering the union's discriminatory practices that did not allow female members. She joined the Women's Auxiliary Army Corps during World War II, in 1941 in an attempt to gain filmmaking skills, as advertisements promoting the group promised. The attempt was not fruitful, however, and she was discharged in 1943 without any filmmaking training.

Ruth Orkin American Girl in Italy Behind the Iconic Photo Messy

In 1943, Orkin moved to New York City in pursuit of a career as a freelance photojournalist. She began working as a nightclub photographer, and received her first assignment in 1945 from The New York Times to shoot Leonard Bernstein. Shortly after, her freelance career grew as she traveled internationally on assignments and contributed photographs to Life, Look, Ladies' Home Journal, and others. Orkin is credited with breaking into a heavily male field.

Ruth Orkin Ruth Orkin An Everyday Life Photographer YouTube

Orkin's most celebrated image is An American Girl in Italy (1951). The subject of the now-iconic photograph was the 23-year-old Ninalee Craig (known at that time as Jinx Allen). The photograph was part of a series originally titled "Don't Be Afraid to Travel Alone." The image depicted Craig as a young woman confidently walking past a group of ogling Italian men in Florence. In recent articles written about the pair, Craig claims that the image was not staged, and was one of many taken throughout the day, aiming to show the fun of traveling alone.

In 1952 Orkin married photographer, filmmaker and fellow Photo League member Morris Engel. Orrin and Engel collaborated on two major independent feature films, "Little Fugitive" (1953) and "Lovers and Lollipops" (1955). After the success of the two films, Orkin returned to photography, taking color shots of Central Park as seen through her apartment window. The resulting photographs were collected in two books, "A World Through My Window" (1978) and "More Pictures from My Window" (1983).

Orkin taught photography at the School of Visual Arts in the late 1970s, and at the International Center of Photography in 1980. After a long, private battle with cancer, Orkin died of the disease at her New York City apartment on January 16, 1985.

Exhibitions

Lists of solo and group exhibitions are taken directly from the Ruth Orkin Photo Archive Career page.

Solo exhibitions

1974

  • Nikon House, New York, NY
  • 1977

  • Witkin Gallery, New York, NY
  • Enjoy Gallery, Boston
  • 1978

  • Milwaukee Center of Photography, Milwaukee
  • Kiva Gallery, Boston
  • 1979

  • University of Akron, Ohio
  • Afterimage Gallery, Dallas, Texas
  • 1979-1985

  • Rizzoli Gallery, NY
  • 1980

  • Atlanta Gallery of Photography, Atlanta, Georgia
  • 1981

  • Witkin Gallery, New York, NY
  • 1982

  • Douglas Elliot Galler, San Francisco
  • 1983

  • Equivalents Gallery, Seattle, Washington
  • 1985

  • Witkin Gallery, New York, NY
  • 1990

  • Photo Gallery International, Tokyo, Japan
  • 1994

  • Witkin Gallery, New York, NY
  • 1995

  • International Center of Photography, NY
  • 1998

  • Michael Lord Gallery, Milwaukee, WI
  • Irving Galleries, Palm Beach, FL
  • 1999

  • Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York, NY
  • Jan Kesner Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
  • 2002

  • Tom Blau Gallery, London, England
  • Sag Harbor Picture Gallery, Sag Harbor, NY
  • 2005

  • Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York, NY
  • 2007

  • Stephen Bulger Gallery, Toronto, Canada
  • Michael Hoppen Gallery, London, England
  • Cavalier Galleries, Nantucket, MA
  • Joie de Livres Gallery, Salisbury, CT
  • 2011

  • Stephen Bulger Gallery, Toronto, Canada
  • Lumiere Brothers, Moscow, Russia
  • 2014

  • Duncan Miller Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
  • Fondazione Stelline, Milan, Italy
  • Group exhibitions

    1950

    Young Photographers, Museum of Modern Art NY
    1955
    The Family of Man, Museum of Modern Art, NY
    1964
    The World and Its People, The World’s Fair, NY
    1965
    Photography in the Fine Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
    1978
    Photographic Crossroads: The Photo League, SUNY, New Paltz
    1981
    Manhattan Observed, NY Historical Society
    1985
    American Images, 1945-1980, Barbican Art Gallery, London
    1985
    Collecting New York: Recent Acquisitions, Museum of City of NY
    1986
    New York: The City and Its People, Working People’s Cultural Palace, Beijing, China
    1986
    Cross Examinations, Mendocino Art Center, Mendocino, California
    1987
    Masters of Starlight, LA County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA
    1987
    Diamonds are Forever: Artists and Writers on Baseball, NY State Museum, Albany 1988 Master Photographs from The Photography in the Fine Arts Exhibition, ICP, NY
    1989
    The Human Element: B/W Photography, Cal State, Long Beach
    1996
    A History of Women Photographers, New York Public Library, New York, NY
    1997
    Defining Eye: Women Photographers of the 20th Century, St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO
    2001
    The City That Never Sleeps, Robert Mann Gallery, New York, NY
    2002
    Game Face, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.From Within, Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York, NYPhotographs We Know, David Fahey Gallery, Los Angeles, CAJews of Brooklyn, Long Island University, Brooklyn, NY
    2003
    Celebrating Central Park, Hirschl and Adler Galleries, New York, NY
    2005
    At the Crossroads of Desire: A Times Square Centennial, AXA Gallery, New York, NYNew York! New York!, Photographs Do Not Bend, Dallas, TXFrom Within, Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York, NY
    2006
    American Photographers: Fine Prints Exhibition, Photo Gallery International, Tokyo, JapanIn Black and White: Works on Paper from the Jewish Museum Collection, New York, NYActing the Part: Photography as Theatre, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, CanadaWinter in Black and White, Monroe Gallery, Santa Fe, NM
    2007
    Women Who Shot the 20th Century, Monroe Gallery, Santa Fe, NMCelluloid Skyline: New York and the Movies, Grand Central Terminal, New York, NY
    2009
    The Women of the Photo League, Higher Pictures, New York, NY
    2010
    Shine, Photographs Do Not Bend, Dallas, TXThe Heartbeat of Fashion, International Center of Photography, New York, NYBeyond Color, Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York, NYNew York in the 40s, Tula Art Center, Atlanta, GAShout Freedom, Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH
    2011
    Kid Kulture, Westport Arts Center, Westport, CTRevelations, Robert Anderson Gallery, New York, NY40 Exceptional Photographs, Afterimage Gallery, Dallas, TXThe Radical Camera: New York’s Photo League 1936-1951, The Jewish Museum, New York, NY
    2013
    Eye Wonder: Women Photographers in the Bank of America Collection, Cer Modern, Ankara, Turkey

    Photography

  • 3rd Prize Winner, LIFE Magazine's Young Photographer's Contest, 1951
  • One of Top Ten Women Photographers in the U.S., Professional Photographers of America, 1959
  • 1st Annual Manhattan Cultural Award, Photography, 1980
  • Other

  • Certificate of Merit, Municipal Art Society of New York, 1984
  • References

    Ruth Orkin Wikipedia