Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Annie at the Barbican


Last night, after a long and exhausting day at work that is better not spoken about, I went with some friends to the Barbican to hear the photographer Annie Leibovitz talk about her new book, a two-volume set dedicated to portraits of women. My friend Colin offered me one of his extra tickets on Sunday, and I jumped at the chance because -- photography! (Even though the kind of portraiture that is Annie Leibovitz's specialty isn't really my kind of picture-taking.)

We met at the restaurant in the Barbican overlooking the central reflecting pond. Another co-worker, Mike, came as well. As you can see above, the church across the way already has its Christmas tree up and lit. We had a good dinner -- fish & chips and a gin & tonic for me, two essentially British pairings!


I tried to photograph the unusual round, concrete restrooms at the Barbican, but I couldn't get the whole space into a single frame. So I took a pano shot, which distorts things, but I think it turned out pretty well! The toilets themselves are around that curve at left. You can even see me in the mirror. The space looked like something out of "A Clockwork Orange," but I guess it must be incredibly easy to clean. You could just hose it down.

Anyway, the Leibovitz talk was a bit disappointing. As I told Mike and Colin afterwards, some people are visual communicators and some people are verbal, and Leibovitz is definitely the former. She started by showing slides of her earlier portraits of women, which featured in the first volume, but some slides contained about a dozen thumbnail pictures and it was hard to see them. She also basically just ran down the list of who was featured -- Elizabeth Taylor, Martha Stewart, Dolly Parton, etc. -- but she didn't tell many stories or talk much about the processes she uses to take her portraits. I would like to have heard more about how she gets people to relax, to reveal themselves.

Then she went through slides of the photos in the more recent volume, and then took a few questions in a disastrous Q&A. She declined to use the pre-submitted questions the Barbican had collected, and instead had the poor host trying to pass a microphone from the stage out to the audience, where the questions were often unfocused and Leibovitz was obviously having trouble hearing and understanding them. The questions rambled and the answers rambled.

So I wouldn't call it an altogether successful evening, but it was still interesting to see her and see her work. I suppose at the end of the day the pictures are supposed to speak for themselves, right?

She did talk about how London felt lighter to her, and less oppressed, than the United States does right now. She is clearly opposed to Trump's governance and threw in a few somewhat political remarks here and there. For example, she showed a picture of a room at the White House featuring portraits of the first ladies, and said something like, "Who knows if it still exists?"

15 comments:

  1. Too bad about the Annie Liebovitz event, although I’m sure it was fun to see her. Sounds like work to me. The bathroom photo is great.

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  2. Annie's politics sound good, at least. It is sad to hear she was a bit of a fail in presentation. The first photo is terrific.

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  3. I wish I was better at portrait photography. Mainly I am too shy to overtly take someone’s photo without their tacit acknowledgement and posing for it.

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  4. Who knows indeed! It sounds like a bit of a disappointment of an evening, but on the bright side you did get to have fish and chips and a gin and tonic, so all was not lost. :-)

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  5. Well, dinner and the view were good! But that's disappointing when someone you would expect to have some good stories to tell doesn't tell them or present well. But at least it was a break in the action!

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  6. That's too bad it wasn't better. I would have been excited and disappointed as well.

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  7. That was disappointing. I wonder if she was cajoled into such an appearance, if she is apparently ill at ease in public speaking.

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  8. It sounds very disappointing. Why, I wonder, didn't she want to answer the prepared questions? It would have been so much easier for her, and for everyone else.
    The putting together of her slides sounds quite ill-advised, too - if she has someone who advises her on this kind of thing.

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  9. Sounds as if she would have done better to stay in her lane. Writers, too, are often terrible speakers. Not their strength. But the dinner was a consolation.

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  10. Dinner with friends sounds really good and the views of the night lights over the water is fantastic. Fish and chips are an all-time favorite.
    I agree, it would have been nice if L. had talked about her technique and personal experiences as a photographer. Given her presentation, it seems she does not like public appearances, at least not in this format.

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  11. That first picture is fabulous! Too bad the event flopped, but it was probably still a good experience even with the problems. I wish I lived in such an exciting place as London!

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  12. What a shame she wasn't better, but you're probably right that she is a visual communicator and not a verbal one.

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  13. One of the pictures from her first book of women's portraits is one of my very favorite photos of all times. It's of Jerry Hall in full going-out regalia nursing one of her babies. I've posted about it several times.
    Sorry it was a bit of a disappointing evening.

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  14. That does sound a bit disappointing. It sounds like she's not a very practiced presenter. I agree, I would like to hear how she comes up with the photo styles. Many of them present the people very different than their normal persona.
    I love that view out over the fountain.

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  15. Well, at least you enjoyed your dinner out with friends. Maybe she will change her question set up for future performances...

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