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Photographer Elinor Carucci

The naked truth about family life

January 7, 2010 11:20
Elinor Carucci and child in the bath: The exhibition features intimate portraits of her family

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

3 min read

Earlier this week an exhibition of photographs by American-Israeli photographer Elinor Carucci, entitled Intimacy, opened at the James Hyman Gallery in London. Many of the moments that she records show scenes that others would probably prefer to remain private; rituals of personal hygiene, moments of marital crisis, portraits of her and her family naked.

Carucci was born in Jerusalem in 1971 but has lived in New York since the mid-1990s. She started taking photographs of her family while still in her teens. “I was very young when I started,” she explains. “I was just 15 when I picked up my father’s camera for the first time. He was an amateur photographer. I was just at home doing nothing and my mum woke up from an afternoon nap and I took her picture. I started taking photos without knowing much about photography.’

So why does she photograph her family so much? “I don’t really have an answer,’ she admits. “It fills a need that doesn’t go away. I do it because I want to and need to. It helps me know who I am. All of us, whether we are professional photographers or not, use photography to keep moments we don’t want to lose.” She stresses that she could not take these kinds of photographs of other people. “My way of photography is so personal. I can’t go that way with others.”

It was this emphasis on the family that interested gallery owner James Hyman. He says: “I was attracted by the way Elinor presents her own family, the different generations, and intimate events big and small. What is especially significant is the way in which she emphasises her own place; her position as daughter, wife, mother. “It is a surprise to me how rare it is to have an artist respond to their family. I don’t have a thesis on this but the closeness of family, whether positive or negative, may have a particular Jewish resonance.”

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