Influencing Me – Robert Mapplethorpe’s Flowers

Influencing Me - Robert Mapplethorpe's flowers

My Influencing Me post today is more on macro style photography and I thought we could look at Robert Mapplethorpe’s flowers. He has a different way of photographing them.

Influencing Me - Robert Mapplethorpe's flowers

Influencing Me – Robert Mapplethorpe’s Flowers

I was first introduced to his work over 15 years ago and I often think about his photos of flowers. His compositions were beautiful. I loved how he did them. As he was working long before digital his images have that film quality to them. You can see the grain of the film in them. There was no way to get rid of that back then.

Most of the images are black and white, with a few exceptions being in colour. The other thing that is obvious his work that it is all set up. It could be said that his work more still life and he had control over the whole image. I like the simplicity of the images too. He often concentrates on the structure of the flowers.

There were some compositions that I loved so much that I asked a ceramic artist friend to make me a vase so I could do them. So far, I haven’t done the image, but maybe this year is the time to do it.

Influencing Me - Robert Mapplethorpe's flowers

I thought it might be nice to take a look at who he was and I have copied some information from Wikipedia about him.

Biography

Mapplethorpe was born in Floral Park, Queens, New York City, the son of Joan Dorothy (Maxey) and Harry Irving Mapplethorpe, an electrical engineer. He was of English, Irish, and German descent, and grew up as a Roman Catholic in Our Lady of the Snows Parish. He had three brothers and two sisters. One of his brothers, Edward, later worked for him as assistant and became a photographer as well. He studied for a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, where he majored in Graphic Arts, though he dropped out in 1969 before finishing his degree. Mapplethorpe lived with his girlfriend Patti Smith from 1967 to 1972, and she supported him by working in bookstores. They created art together, and maintained a close friendship throughout Mapplethorpe’s life.

Mapplethorpe took his first photographs in the late 1960s or early 1970s using a Polaroid camera. In 1972, he met art curator Sam Wagstaff, who would become his mentor, lover, patron, and lifetime companion. In the mid-1970s, Wagstaff acquired a Hasselblad medium-format camera and Mapplethorpe began taking photographs of a wide circle of friends and acquaintances, including artists, composers, and socialites. During this time, he became friends with New Orleans artist George Dureau, whose work had such a profound impact on Mapplethorpe that he restaged many of Dureau’s early photographs. From 1977 until 1980, Mapplethorpe was the lover of writer and Drummer magazine editor Jack Fritscher, who introduced him to Mineshaft (a gay Manhattan sex club).

By the 1980s, Mapplethorpe’s subject matter focused on statuesque male and female nudes, delicate flower still lifes, and highly formal portraits of artists and celebrities. Mapplethorpe’s first studio was at 24 Bond Street in Manhattan. In the 1980s, Wagstaff bought a top-floor loft at 35 West 23rd Street for Robert, where he resided, also using it as a photo-shoot studio.[16] He kept the Bond Street loft as his darkroom. In 1988, Mapplethorpe selected Patricia Morrisroe to write his biography, which was based on more than 300 interviews with celebrities, critics, lovers, and Mapplethorpe himself.

Death

Mapplethorpe died on the morning of March 9, 1989, at the age of 42 due to complications from HIV/AIDS, in a Boston, Massachusetts hospital. His body was cremated. His ashes are interred at St. John’s Cemetery, Queens in New York, at his mother’s grave-site, etched “Maxey”.

Gallery

I have prepared a small gallery of some of his images. You can find more of his work at the dedicated website, The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. They also have a lot more information about him as well.

You might be interested in …

12 Comments

  1. Oh my! I have known and followed Mapplethorpe’s work since before he died. His flowers are extraordinary! They are carefully controlled, utterly classic, and yet there’s something modern and even carefree about them. His flowers say so much!

  2. I knew of his wonderful B&W nudes but had forgotten about his flowers, thank-you for sharing. You are the photographer’s photographer!

  3. I was working on a double major in geography and art photography, and studying the history of photography in the 1980’s when Mapplethorpe was doing the flowers and nudes and celebrities. We had much discussion about his work as a contemporary photographer pushing limits.

    1. That would have been an amazing time. I really didn’t learn about his work until long after his death. I do love it. I can understand how he would have been pushing the limits. Incredible.
      Thank you for sharing that Timothy.

Comments are closed.

Discover more from LEANNE COLE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading