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Home » Uncategorized » Jamie Livingston 1979-1997. 6,697 Polaroids

Jamie Livingston 1979-1997. 6,697 Polaroids

Posted by: Rachel Hulin    Posted date: May 22, 2008  |  5 Comments
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06-02-97_std.jpg


06-02-97

Fittingly, it was Noah Kalina who sent me the link to Chris Higgins at Mental Floss, who had uncovered what at first seemed to be a mystery; a website with a trove of images documenting a life, with no name attached:

What started for me as an amusing collection of photos — who takes
photos every day for eighteen years? — ended with a shock. Who was this
man? How did his photos end up on the web? I went on a two-day hunt,
examined the source code of the website, and tried various Google
tricks. Finally my investigation turned up the photographer as Jamie
Livingston, and he did indeed take a photo every day for eighteen
years, until the day he died, using a Polaroid SX-70 camera. He called
the project “Photo of the Day” and presumably planned to collect them
at some point — had he lived. He died on October 25, 1997 — his 41st
birthday.

It turns out Higgins had somehow stumbled upon an unpublished website Livingston’s friends Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid had put
together. The website came out the exhibit JAMIE LIVINGSTON. PHOTO OF THE DAY: 1979-1997, 6,697 Polaroids, dated
in sequence, that opened in 2007 at the Bertelsmann
Campus Center at Bard College (where Livingston started the series, as
a student, way back when). The exhibit included photographs of every
Polaroid and took up a 7 x 120 foot space.

1602911631_04b5a7dbc7.jpg

This story is pretty touching, and has been picked up on a lot of photo blogs, and elsewhere. Only the Blog Knows Brooklyn has full coverage of the story, the author having known Livingston personally:

This photographic diary, began when Jamie was a student at Bard College in
Annandale-on-Hudson. The project continued when he moved to apartments
in New York City including the incredible circus memorabilia-filled
loft on Fulton Street, which he shared with his best friend.

The picture taking continued when he became a
much-in-demand cinematographer and editor of music videos back in the
early days of MTV. He contributed his talents to the ground-breaking
Nike “Revolution” spot and many other commercials, too. 

When Jamie Livingston, photographer, filmmaker, circus performer,
accordian player, Mets fan, and above all, loyal friend, died on
October 25th (his birthday) in 1997 at the age of 41, he left behind
hundreds of bereft friends and a collection of 6,000 photographs neatly
organized in small suitcases and wooden fruit crates.

Apparently the story is even now on Wikipedia. Amazing how polaroids spread. Below, a selection.

04-23-79_std.jpg

04-23-79

01-30-80_std.jpg

01-30-80

07-02-89_std.jpg

07-02-89

03-30-91_std.jpg
03-30-91 (trove of the photographs taken so far)

12-06-93_std.jpg
12-06-93

12-18-96_std1.jpg
12-18-96

05-02-97_std.jpg
05-02-97

05-04-97_std.jpg
05-04-97

09-11-97_std.jpg
09-11-97

10-05-97_std.jpg
10-05-97

Thumbnail image for 10-07-97_std1.jpg
10-07-97

10-24-97_std.jpg
10-24-97

 

About the author
Rachel Hulin




5 Comments

stmarc.livejournal.com 5-22-2008

This is one of the most amazing personal projects I have ever seen. Not that others haven’t done the once-a-day thing, but TWENTY YEARS, through thick and thin, in Polaroid, right up to the *day he died?* Words are nearly meaningless.

Bobby 5-22-2008

this project is so amazing. i can’t stop thinking about it. the ending… omg.

FartingThunder 5-22-2008

thanks for doing our homework, (after we posted this) where did you find the photo of the wall of polaroids.. amazing to say the least..

Cheap End Of The Hunt By George 7-2-2008

Cheap End Of The Hunt By George

Kike 10-20-2009

Is amazing… Does anyone know if I can see the exhibition in NY?



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