Stanley Booth

William Eggleston

The man who reinvented color photography is famous for pictures that some call banal, and others call extraordinary. He says his subjects are the very stuff of life.

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William Eggleston, now 60 years old, seems securely attached to the title “Father of Color Photography.” Maybe the word “color” should be modified by “art” or “artistic,” because of course he didn’t invent the process. There have been those, however, who would deny that Eggleston’s photography has much of anything to do with art.

I met Eggleston in Memphis in the early ’60s, shortly after he had come there from his native Mississippi. He was already reputed to be a “serious” photographer. His progress over the decades, however slow and frustrating it’s seemed at times to him, has been astonishing. The prince of a matriarchal Southern empire (his mother, two sisters, one wife and many female admirers), he has moved with assurance all along, paying scant heed to naysayers.

One afternoon in 1967, Eggleston, a beautifully groomed and attired young man with dark hair and eyes, dropped in on John Szarkowski, then curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, with a suitcase of color slides. It was as if Eggleston was turning himself in to the authorities. A result of this meeting, nine years later, was Eggleston’s one-man show of color photographs at the MoMA, only the second in its history. In his introduction to “William Eggleston’s Guide,” a hardcover book published by the museum to accompany the show, Szarkowski referred to Eggleston’s pictures as “perfect,” to which the highly offended New York Times art critic Hilton Kramer responded, “Perfect? Perfectly banal, perhaps. Perfectly boring, certainly.”

The MoMA show included such images as a dog drinking from a mud puddle, shoes under a bed, a child’s tricycle, a tile shower and a kitchen oven. Maybe Kramer figured if he wanted to see a pile of shoes, he could look under his own bed. Others have objected to the subject matter of Eggleston’s photographs — one compared Eggleston’s work unfavorably with Ansel Adams’ big shots of such things as moonlight on mesas. Adams’ subjects are magnificent but have little to do with most people’s daily lives. Eggleston’s work is dedicated to showing the beauty, humor and horror that surround us at all times and in all places.

An important key to Eggleston’s underlying meaning is his admiration for Paul Klee and Vassily Kandinsky. As did these two good-humored masters, Eggleston produces works that are at once, in his phrase, “like jokes and like lessons.” It would be a mistake to overemphasize the influence of Klee and Kandinsky on Eggleston — even calling it an influence goes too far. It’s more of an affinity, comparable to the one he shares with musicians as disparate as Satie and Ketelby. (Eggleston is also a musical composer and performer, but that’s a topic for another day.)

Growing up in comfortable circumstances on a cotton plantation in Sumner, Miss., Eggleston took his first pictures when he was around 10, using a focus-free snapshot camera, the Brownie Hawkeye. “Everything I photographed blurred, looked horrible,” he remembers.

Eggleston’s father died in the Pacific during the Second World War, and much of Eggleston’s nurturing consequently fell to his maternal grandfather, Judge Joseph Albert May, who died when Eggleston was 11. “He took pictures for a hobby, so I had his Contax and Leica IIIA at home,” Eggleston says.

Eggleston attended a military-style boarding academy, Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tenn. His memories of the place are not pleasant: “One of the older students used to tell me, ‘Eggleston, I don’t know whether to call you “shit-tit” or “tit-shit.”‘” But he had a friend there named Tom Buchanan, who, later, when they were both attending Vanderbilt University, “marched me to the store and made me buy a camera and developer.”

In the words of the brief biographical sketch in the “Guide,” Eggleston “matriculated at, and on occasion attended, Vanderbilt University, Delta State College, and the University of Mississippi.” At Ole Miss, around 1962, he saw for the first time the work of Cartier-Bresson, his initial inspiration: “A photographer friend of mine bought a book of Magnum work with some Cartier-Bresson pictures that were real art, period. You didn’t think a camera made the picture. Sure didn’t think of somebody taking the picture at a certain speed with a certain speed film. I couldn’t imagine anybody doing anything more than making a perfect Cartier-Bresson. Which I could do, finally.”

While he was still in the grip of the Cartier-Bresson obsession, Eggleston moved to Memphis, but it proved a dead end from which escape was vital. “There came a point — must’ve had to do with pulling up roots and coming to Memphis — I had to face the fact that what I had to do was go out into foreign landscapes,” Eggleston said. “What was new back then was shopping centers, and I took pictures of them.”

I remember being amazed at that first color work. I had never seen anything like it; no one had. The first private, so to speak, color photography that was equal in technical quality to advertising photographs, it was truly subversive, lavishing the kind of attention on everyday reality that had been reserved for selling products. Eggleston recalls:

What I set out to do was produce some color pictures that were completely satisfying, that had everything, starting with composition. My first tries were ridiculous. I got some snapshots back and I hadn’t exposed them properly; they were awful. I threw them away. Composition was probably correct, but it was lost in the … dismal technical failure.

I’d assumed I could do in color what I could do in black and white, and I got a swift, harsh lesson. All bones bared. But it had to be. Then one night I stayed up figuring out what I was gonna do the next day, which was go to Montesi’s, the big supermarket on Madison Avenue in Memphis. It seemed a good place to try things out. I had this new exposure system in mind, of overexposing the film so all the colors would be there. And by God, it all worked. Just overnight. The first frame, I remember, was a guy pushing grocery carts. Some kind of pimply, freckle-faced guy in the late sunlight. Pretty fine picture, actually.

It has by now become evident, perhaps even to Hilton Kramer, that an essential point of Eggleston’s work is his determinedly anti-heroic subject matter. He has said that he believes it’s possible to photograph anything, anywhere. (“A long time ago I didn’t,” he recalls. “I thought you had to go to Paris.”) Because of the protean nature of photography and its many uses, critics and non-critics have trouble seeing photographs for what they are rather than for what’s in them. Sublime photojournalists such as Robert Capa and Susan Meiselas have created powerful images of compelling subjects, but this is far from what Eggleston does. His work starts from the premise that it’s about more than its subject matter. “It’s the photography that’s important,” he has said.

For nearly 40 years, Eggleston has been married to Mississippi princess Rosa Dosset. As teenagers they roamed the Delta in matching baby-blue Cadillacs. They have two sons, William and Winston, and a daughter, Andra. The sons are world-class loudspeaker designers. If you’re into musical perfection and can stand the heat, they’ll sell you a pair of speakers for a hundred grand. (Their economy speaker, the Andra model, will set you back $15,000.) Little Bill told Stereophile magazine, which named the more expensive speakers its product of the year for 1997, “My dad always told me that when he started, the only way you could get really good speakers was to build them yourself,” adding, “It seemed like there was always a war between having a pile of equipment in the living room and having a neat, normal room.”

When I first knew Eggleston, one occasionally heard the word “dilettante” used to describe him, simply because one man isn’t supposed to know about music, firearms, sound systems, television set construction and art. Eggleston’s strict low-key aesthetic kept him from becoming a household name overnight. Seekers of romance can find it in his work, but only with an investment of effort that such seekers, whether housewives or New York Times critics, are rarely willing to make. Though he did not slacken his progress in amassing a great body of work — thousands of exposures — Eggleston did not publish another book of photographs until “The Democratic Forest” in 1989. He had by that time photographed extensively in the American West, Kenya, Egypt, Georgia, Louisiana, England, Germany and Austria. He had also completed a commission to photograph Graceland, Elvis Presley’s monument to bad taste. Though Eggleston and Presley came from opposite ends of the social spectrum, there was a certain poetic justice in the choice of Eggleston as the one to preserve Presley’s milieu. After becoming a successful entertainer, Presley never wore blue jeans. Eggleston has never owned a pair in his life. The significance of wearing what are essentially work clothes was lost on neither man.

Eggleston has been characterized, justly, as willful. Seldom has there been a greater individualist than Eggleston, a man who prides himself on never having done a push-up. (For a former military school inmate, this is indeed an accomplishment.) His iron determination and discipline are perhaps most clearly revealed in his work method, which consists of taking one shot of an image. That is, contrary to what they tell you in photography class, Eggleston doesn’t bracket exposures, he doesn’t try first one angle and then another; he sees a composition and captures it once and for all time.

True, his photographs, as Eudora Welty acknowledged in her introduction to “The Democratic Forest,” “focus on the mundane world. But,” she hastens to add, “no subject is fuller of implications than the mundane world!”

Eggleston’s next book, “Faulkner’s Mississippi,” published in 1990, contained an extensive text by Willie Morris, another native of the state. It was a minage ` trois made in heaven, or someplace rather dissimilar from Mississippi. Morris’ prose is excellent, filled with understanding and empathy, but Eggleston’s photographs, so unlike much of Faulkner’s work in their impeccable clarity, overpower the project and make it ultimately one more great Eggleston album.

In 1959 the master photographer Walker Evans called color photography vulgar — not meaning it as a compliment — but that was before he fell in love with William Christenberry’s Brownie pictures and the products of his own Polaroid SX-70. In the ’70s, Szarkowski said that Eggleston was inventing color photography, and it seems he was right. Many photographers have followed his lead, but no one has been able to do what he does. His influence in that sense might be compared to Hemingway’s: He changed everything, but nobody can really emulate him. His subject matter is too unpredictable, his compositional sense too unerring.

The most extensive view of Eggleston’s work published to date is “Ancient and Modern,” released to coincide with a 1992 exhibition at the Barbican Art Gallery in London. It includes black-and-white images from the early and middle ’60s as well as color work from around the world. The exhibition traveled to Denmark, Germany and Switzerland. He has since had many exhibitions in the United States and in other countries such as Japan and Austria. In March of this year he went to Goteberg, Sweden, to accept the Erna and Victor Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography. At the same time there was an exhibition at the Hasselblad Center in the Goteberg Museum of Art. Scalo publishers issued a book, “William Eggleston,” to commemorate the event. In its foreword, Gunilla Knape, director of the Hasselblad Center, writes, “Eggleston introduced a new aesthetic, a new ‘democratic’ way of seeing through which the ordinary and banal became extraordinary and engrossing.”

The banal, then, is still banal, but now it’s engrossing. I suppose this must be seen as progress, but Eggleston’s belief has been and remains that what the resolutely high-minded call banality is the stuff of life itself. It is where we live — but not only there. Much has been made of Eggleston’s oft-quoted statement “I am at war with the obvious.” Here he is, not atypically, saying a good deal less than he means. Eggleston loves the obvious — he hates, and is indeed at war with, the idea of it, the contempt in which it is held. He sees what’s in the gutter but also looks up to the heavens. As Malcolm Jones, an unusually perceptive critic of Eggleston’s work, has observed, “He addresses the meanest objects with unstuttering love.”

Sharps and Flats: Various artists

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: Music from and inspired by the motion picture

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Lyricist, composer and singer Johnny Mercer, on one of many return trips to his beloved hometown, was asked by a lady friend, “Johnny, don’t you think Savannah has a lot of po-tential?”

“Yeah, honey,” Mercer said, “and that’s the way we’re gonna leave it!”

Leaving Savannah’s potential untouched, it turns out, was too much to hope for. John Berendt’s “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil,” known in Savannah as The Book, is now The Movie. Also The CD. And there will be, if there aren’t already, the postcards, T-shirts, coffee mugs … you name it.

Savannah, that grand old lady with outer garments of wrought-iron lace and flowing tresses of Spanish moss, is a secret place no longer. And the muffled sound you hear emanating from Bonaventure Cemetery is Johnny Mercer’s body spinning in its grave.

John Berendt was graduated from Harvard, worked as an editor at Esquire in the ’60s (it was he who shepherded William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Jean Genet and John Sack through the tear gas during their fateful sojourn at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago), and later became editor of New York magazine. His book (published in 1994 and on the bestseller list ever since), while basically nonfiction, took liberties of chronology and motivation. The movie takes even more, including the reduction of four trials — Savannah antiques dealer Jim Williams being the only man in the history of Georgia tried four times for the same murder — into one. But something had to be cut, since the original version lasted three hours and forty-five minutes.

The film opens with aerial views of the Savannah landscape and shots of the black voodoo woman Minerva, who seems to have had a profound insight into, and effect on, the action. Over this, the soundtrack, bizarrely, lays k.d. lang’s a cappella version of the Mercer-Hoagy Carmichael song “Skylark.” Matt Pierson, producer of the “Midnight” CD, said that song was chosen because it was “so evocative.” Maybe so, but not of Savannah, where you don’t see skylarks, or “valleys green with spring,” or, for that matter, “meadows in the mist.” Salt-water marshes in the mist, yes. There are many such faux pas throughout the film, marks of the incomprehension of outlanders, as when, early on in the film, John Lee Hancock’s script requires the lovely Alison Eastwood to knock on the door of the solitary Berendt character (called John Kelso, and played by John Cusack) and ask, “Do y’all have any ice?” Y’all is always plural, y’all.

Nevertheless, the movie is a lot of (strange) fun. The black transvestite Lady Chablis, who plays him/herself, is surprisingly effective (though he/she’s had, admittedly, a lifetime to research the part), and the film is another pleasantly weird one from Eastwood, among the few contemporary directors with the power to do basically whatever he pleases. “Midnight” is certainly better than Eastwood’s recent “Absolute Power,” which was based on the worst screenplay ever written by William Goldman. One of “Midnight’s” opening shots, of Mercer’s grave, wasn’t in the original script — Eastwood told me he’d added the grave as a sort of tribute. (You can’t hear Mercer spinning in it because lang covers up the sound with her butchering of “Skylark.”)

The CD “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: Music From and Inspired by the Motion Picture,” not a soundtrack CD per se, features a program of songs all associated with Mercer, some of them, like Kevin Spacey singing “That Old Black Magic” and Eastwood singing “Accentuate the Positive,” not in the movie. Eastwood has a record company, see, and Warner Brothers has all these recording artists under contract, many of them just standing around most of the time scratching where it itches, and there was this movie about Savannah, where Johnny Mercer comes from, so … Anyway, the CD begins with a track of lang singing “Skylark” (this time with musicians, thank God) similar to the one that closes the movie. If lang is a singer capable of rendering justice to Mercer and Carmichael, I’m a female African-American aviator. Her articulation and intonation are embarrassingly bad. The best thing I can say about her is that her timing is better than that of Cassandra Wilson, who spoils “Days of Wine and Roses” with her weird inability to keep within bars. Singers like Ray Charles and Shirley Horn get behind the beat and catch up — not Wilson, who’s playing tennis with the net down. When she wants to stick an extra bar and a half in, she does so, then goes on singing as if nothing disastrous had occurred. Why people let her get away with it is beyond me.

The CD contains 14 tracks. Jazz pianist Brad Mehldau does a nice version of “Dream” and saxophonist Joshua Redman acquits himself capably in rendering “I’m an Old Cowhand.” Included are two new recordings by veteran performers, Joe Williams’ “Too Marvelous for Words” and Rosemary Clooney’s “Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear to Tread).” Sad to say, they’re both well past their primes, as is Clint, assuming he had a prime as a singer. Alison Eastwood has been studying singing with Sue Raney, and her version of “Come Rain or Come Shine” is not bad. Spacey’s track is unexpectedly professional, though perhaps a bit too actorish, as if he’s channeling Sammy Davis Jr. Paula Cole’s “Autumn Leaves” would be better if shorter and straighter. Kevin Mahogany does “Laura” and Diana Krall does the great “Midnight Sun.” The trouble with these younger jazz-style singers is that their phrasing has been distorted by the melisma of the rock singers they’ve grown up listening to (Cole), or that they have little in the way of distinctive individual personalities (Mahogany, Krall). The best track by a young artist is Alison Krauss’ “This Time the Dream’s on Me.” She’s at least a real musician, with good time and intonation, and her rendition of the Mercer-Arlen classic is modest and inoffensive.

Recently I had a talk with native Georgian Ray Charles, who has long been a lover of Mercer’s music. I found it somehow reassuring, though sadly so, that Charles, like me, finds little to cheer him on the current music scene. According to Charles, Mercer, like Billie Holiday, Jo Stafford, Johnny Hodges, Charlie Parker, Milt Jackson, Lester Young, Clark Terry and a precious few others, could perform “one note and you know that’s who it is. I try to listen to the radio stations, I try to check on the music, because that is my profession, I wanna know what’s goin’ on in it, but I gotta tell you, I don’t see the kind of thing I’m talkin’ to you about in today’s age. I don’t see it. Now if you know some, you tell me, I’ll be happy to check it.”

When Warner Brothers made “To Have and Have Not,” Howard Hawks put the non-actor Carmichael in it and gave the picture some character. Eastwood has recently said that one artist who can unfailingly cheer him — and his 11-month-old daughter — is Mose Allison, the great Southern blues-jazz artist. These days, to do what Hoagy did in 1944, Mose would have to be signed to the label. Too bad. He could have given some coherence and style to “Midnight” — the picture and the CD.

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