James Dean became one of the most iconic actors of modern times. Roy Schatt's legendary photos of him at the Actors Studio in the '50s reveal why.
May 12 2015 6:00 AM EST
November 17 2015 5:28 AM EST
xtyfr
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Private Policy and Terms of Use.
In keeping with the gallery program of rediscovering forgotten artists and photographers, curator James Cavello of the Westwood Gallery in New York City is presenting the exhibition "Roy Schatt: James Dean and the Actors Studio, Photographs From the Estate."
Schatt's legendary photos depict a man who was both his friend and his photography student. The images encompass the iconic "Torn Sweater" series as well as Dean in personal moments playing the bongos and pretending to steal candy from a newsstand. The exhibition also includes photos by Dean as he practiced the art of photography using Schatt and actor friends as his subject.
"I knew James Dean from February 1954 until he died in September 1955," Schatt noted. "I knew him as a friend and as a student. He was a disrupter of norms, a bender of rules, a disquieter of calm. Through the following pictures and vignettes, I hope to transmit a glimpse of his most insistent, and perhaps eternal, presence."
The exhibition includes over 50 vintage and modern prints, some never before seen, others exhibited in the 1950s.
In the exhibition are also rare photographs of actors, writers, directors, and playwrights associated with the Actors Studio, where Roy Schatt was the official photographer, and many other images of personalities active in New York theater in the 1950s and '60s are on exhibit. The vintage photos include Actors Studio alumni such as Elia Kazan, Lee Strasberg, Paul Newman, Marilyn Monroe, Geraldine Page, Tennessee Williams, Steve McQueen, Rod Steiger, Sidney Poitier, Joanne Woodward, Martin Landau, Arthur Miller, Jerry Stiller, Anne Meara, Ben Gazzara, Maureen Stapleton, and many other creative individuals -- John Cassavetes, Dorothy Parker, Brendan Behan, Lillian Hellman, William Saroyan, Lorne Greene, Andy Griffith, Budd Schulberg, and Marlene Dietrich.
The exhibit has been extended to July 25.
Fifteen of the James Dean photographs on exhibit are part of an exclusive limited edition, printed and signed by Roy Schatt in the early 1990s and offered for sale by the gallery.
James Dean, 1954 (printed later)
gelatin silver print, signed, stamped
10 x 8 inches
(c) Photo Roy Schatt CMG / Courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC
James Dean in the backyard of Roy Schatt's 33rd Street apartment, studio photograph 1954 (printed later)
gelatin silver print, signed, stamped
8 x 10 inches
(c) photo Roy Schatt CMG / Courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC
James Dean with a light meter in Roy's backyard, photograph 1954 (printed later)
gelatin silver print, signed, stamped
8 x 10 inches
(c) Photo Roy Schatt CMG / Courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC
James Dean "Torn Sweater" Series
photograph 1954 (printed later)
gelatin silver print, signed
20 x 16 inches
(c) Photo Roy Schatt CMG / Courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC
James Dean in his apartment window on West 68th Street, photograph 1954 (printed later)
gelatin silver print, signed
20 x 16 inches
(c) Photo Roy Schatt CMG / Courtesy Westwood Gallery NYC