George S. Zimbel

George S. Zimbel (born July 15, 1929) is an American-Canadian documentary photographer. He has worked professionally since the late 1940s, mainly as a freelancer. He was part of the Photo League and is one of its last surviving members.[1] Born in Massachusetts, he settled in Canada about 1971. His works have been shown with increasing frequency since 2000, and examples of his work are part of several permanent collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.[2] He has been described as a humanist.[3] He has published several books of his photographs and in 2016 was the subject of a documentary retrospective film co-directed by his son Matt Zimbel and distributed by the National Film Board of Canada.[4]

Life and career

Born George Sydney Zimbel in Woburn, Massachusetts, son of a dry goods store owner, he attended Woburn High School and was the school's yearbook photographer. He later studied at the Photo League under John Ebstel.[1]

Zimbel then enrolled in Columbia University in New York where he became the school's news photographer. There he met art student Garry Winogrand and introduced Winogrand to photography. They used the school's darkroom late at night to avoid crowding at other times of the day, and they called themselves the "Midnight to Dawn Club". Both Zimbel and Winogrand later both studied under Alexey Brodovitch at the New School for Social Research on scholarships in 1951.[5]

He next met Edward Steichen, the then curator of the Museum of Modern Art who showed Zimbel original prints by early masters of photography, and this sealed his decision to take up photography as a career. On Steichen's advice, he had a stint as a photographer with the US Army and spent 2 years in Europe during the restoration period following World War II.[1]

On his return to America he became a freelance photographer. One of his early opportunities was the famous Marilyn Monroe shoot on Lexington Avenue in 1954 to promote her film The Seven Year Itch, at which Monroe wore her famous white dress.[6] Zimbel never sold any of these images and packed them away until 1976, whereupon he printed them and began to show them in solo exhibitions.[7][8]

In 1971, Zimbel and his family moved to the small community of Argyle Shore, Queens County, Prince Edward Island where they raised animals for the next 10 years at a farm they called "Bona Fide Farm".[9] After their children moved away, he and his wife relocated to Montreal, where they still reside.[10]

Recognition

Though he was widely published in publications such as the New York Times, Look, Redbook and Architectural Digest in the 1950s and 60s, he did not become widely recognized until a retrospective exhibition of his work was mounted at the Institut Valencià d'Art Modern in Spain in 2000. Since then he has had several major shows around the world.[11]

Personal life

He was married to Elaine Sernovitz in 1955.[12] A professional writer, she has collaborated with George Zimbel on travelogues and other works. George and Elaine Zimbel had four children including jazz musician Matt Zimbel, founder of Manteca. Matt Zimbel co-produced and co-directed (with Jean-Francois Gratton) a documentary film about his father called Zimbelism, released in 2016.[13]

Publications

  • Bourbon Street: New Orleans 1955 (2006)
  • Le livre des lecteurs / A Book of Readers (2011)
  • Momento: Photographs by George S. Zimbel (2015)
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References

  1. Harry Rasmussen, "George Zimbel: The Long-Distance Runner" B&W Magazine (online). Accessed October 29, 2016
  2. Zimbel Blog, August 2007. Accessed October 29, 2016
  3. George S. Zimbel: A Humanist Photographer, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (2016). Accessed October 29, 2016
  4. Zimbelism, National Film Board of Canada (distributor). Accessed December 16, 2016
  5. Encyclopædia Britannica (online), Garry Winogrand. Accessed October 29, 2016
  6. Everett-Green, Robert, After 70 years with a camera in his hands, photographer George Zimbel is still snapping pictures , The Globe and Mail, September 25, 2015
  7. Brownstein, Bill (October 2, 2015). "Photographer George S. Zimbel still sees the light in the darkroom". Montreal Gazette. Postmedia Network Inc. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  8. Zimbel blog, Accessed October 29, 2016.
  9. Argyle Shore Women's Institute, The History of Argyle Shore, Argyle Shore Women's Institute, 2009, p. 137
  10. "Biography". George S. Zimbel. George S. Zimbel. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  11. Zimbel bio, Bulger Gallery (Toronto). Accessed October 29, 2016
  12. Elaine Zimbel biography, Accessed October 29, 2016
  13. "Matt Zimbel: "Zimbelism" at Hot Docs festival", April 24, 2016, CBC News Montreal
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