Observations (Avedon book) explained

Observations
Author:Richard Avedon & Truman Capote
Country:United States
Language:English
Release Date:1959
Pages:151 pp
Oclc:1455816

Observations is a collaborative coffee table book with photography by Richard Avedon, commentary by Truman Capote and design by Alexey Brodovitch. It features a slipcase with color, all-capitalized lettering; the book itself is further housed in a clear acetate/glassine slip cover and is printed with the same bold design as the slipcase in black-and-white. Simon & Schuster published the work in 1959 having it printed using the photogravure method in Lucerne, Switzerland.

Conception

Avedon and Capote started collaboration on the book in 1945.

Contents

Observations contains numerous portraits of famous people of the twentieth century, including Pablo Picasso, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Katharine Hepburn, Marilyn Monroe and Mae West.

Reception

Isak Dinesen was initially insulted by Capote's description of her, but forgave him shortly before her death in 1962.[1]

Kerry William Purcell contends the book's design represents the pinnacle of Alexey Brodovitch's book designs.[2]

The book is a sought-after collectors item and typically sells for hundreds of dollars, even when not in ideal condition.

References

Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. Clarke, Gerald. Capote: a Biography (1998) Carroll & Graff. p. 306-307
    2. Purcell, Kerry William. Alexey Brodovitch (1999) Assouline. p. 170