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Vicki Goldberg dies at 88; saw photography through a literary lens

Vicki Goldberg dies at 88; saw photography through a literary lens

Boston Globe9 hours ago

'Goldberg,' she added, 'brought a broad education, insatiable curiosity, and relentless ambition to her work. She showed us that photography was part of our social and cultural landscape.'
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Ms. Goldberg had a windfall in the case of Bourke-White. In 1973, two years after the photojournalist's death, 8,000 of her photographs and other artifacts were discovered under a stairway in her house in Darien, Conn. Bourke-White had burned most of her diaries, Ms. Goldberg told The New York Times in 1986, but had 'saved everything but the Kleenex,' including menus, receipts, and Time Inc. memo pads. On one pad she'd written, 'Should I marry Erskine Caldwell?' (She and the novelist had a brief and stormy marriage.)
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Ms. Goldberg pored over the trove for an article in New York Magazine and soon embarked on her Bourke-White biography.
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Bourke-White was America's first female photographer to be accredited to cover World War II, a swashbuckling personage who worked for Fortune and then Life magazines. She shot Nazi rallies, and, in agonizing images, the liberation of Buchenwald in Germany. She flew in a Flying Fortress bomber to get shots of a raid on Tunis, Tunisia. She photographed a smug-looking Josef Stalin. Away from the war, she perched on a gargoyle atop the Chrysler Building in Manhattan to photograph its twin and made perhaps what is the most famous portrait of Mahatma Gandhi, sitting cross-legged with his spinning wheel.
Ms. Goldberg captured her contradictions. As an ambitious photojournalist, Bourke-White was wily, opportunistic, and courageous, but she was also manipulative, doing whatever it took to get her shot, including crying on cue.
Writing in The New York Times Book Review, Timothy Foote, a former foreign correspondent for Life magazine, called Ms. Goldberg's biography 'an intricate and provocative portrait, as revealing as fiction, part 'Great Gatsby,' say, part 'I'll Take Manhattan.''
Ms. Goldberg's scholarship was rigorous and her knowledge expansive. Yet as a critic for the Times, where she was a regular contributor during the 1990s, her tone was light and often slightly bemused.
When Madonna's much-ballyhooed 'Sex' book appeared in 1992, wrapped in Mylar, like a condom, Ms. Goldberg had this to say: 'This must be the most gorgeously, even lavishly, produced piece of junk food since Midas tried to sneak a potato chip and found his touch had turned it to gold.'
In 1997, she wrote about Irving Penn, the celebrated Vogue photographer.
'Penn has spent over half a century wielding a camera against the most implacable enemies: disorder, imperfection, the distracting natural world, mortality. He has not exactly come to terms with any of these but erected what barriers he could -- a stringent sense of order to fend off chaos, a fierce devotion to a kind of photographic purity, a stripped-down sense of isolation to counter the world's insistent clutter.'
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Victoria Hesse Liebson was born on July 24, 1936, in St. Louis to Alice (Schwarz) and Louis Liebson, a shoe company executive. She earned a bachelor of arts at Wellesley College in 1958. A year earlier, she had married David Goldberg, a banker.
After the couple moved to New York City, Ms. Goldberg worked as a publishing assistant at Simon & Schuster and began pursuing a doctorate in art history at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University.
She didn't get around to defending her thesis, however; instead, she went to work as an editor for American Photographer magazine when it was launched in 1978.
In addition to her son Eric, she leaves another son, Jeremy, and six grandchildren. She and David Goldberg divorced in 1973. Another marriage, to Loring Eutemey, a graphic designer and illustrator, also ended in divorce. Her third husband, Laurence Young, a professor emeritus of astronautics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, died in 2021. She lived in Waterville Valley, N.H., before moving to the Manhattan assisted living facility.
Ms. Goldberg was a frequent lecturer on photography and the author or editor of a number of books, including 'Photography in Print: Writing From 1816 to the Present' (1981), a collection of essays by photographers such as Alfred Stieglitz and critics Charles Baudelaire and Susan Sontag.
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Another book by Ms. Goldberg, 'The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed Our Lives' (1991), is a lively history of the medium and its cultural impact, from daguerreotype to X-rays, moon shots, and Photoshop.
Even back in 1991, Ms. Goldberg cautioned readers about the tricky nature of photography, writing, 'We could end up being more copiously supplied with news and less concerned, as well as less willing to believe the reports, than any society in history.'
She added, 'These photographs walked into our lives and in some way managed to change them. So it seems appropriate to ask the questions one would ask any intruder: How did you get in? And what are you doing here anyway?'
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