Annie Leibovitz talks high-fliers and photo phobics at Hong Kong show

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Annie Leibovitz talks high-fliers and photo phobics at Hong Kong show
A guest takes a picture of the Annie Leibovitz exhibition "women" during a press tour in Hong Kong on May 31, 2016. From dancers to corporate executives and rights campaigners, the latest show by photographer Annie Leibovitz revolves around high-flying women she says are more confident than her previous subjects -- though some still hated having their picture taken. ISAAC LAWRENCE / AFP.



HONG KONG.- From dancers to corporate executives and rights campaigners, the latest show by photographer Annie Leibovitz revolves around high-flying women she says are more confident than her previous subjects -- though some still hated having their picture taken. 

"Women: New Portraits" opened in Hong Kong Tuesday, the fifth stop on a 10-city tour, displayed in a bare bones setting on a disused floor of an industrial building. 

The images were produced on an Epson printer in her office, says Leibovitz, who opened the show, and are tacked to the walls with drawing pins. 

The US artist, renowned for portraits of leading figures from John Lennon to Elizabeth II, calls the collection a work in progress. 

It is a continuation of a project published in 1999 called "Women", a collaboration with writer Susan Sontag, with whom she had a relationship.  

Whereas the original collection incorporated women who were not in the public eye, the new set revolves around those who have made a splash in their chosen field, a decision Leibovitz defends. 

"I am very aware of women's issues...but I have to be careful of how I venture into them," she told reporters. 

"I really did imagine the show primarily about women in the public consciousness, who have emerged." 

The new works include portraits of young Pakistani education campaigner Malala Yousafzai, dancer Misty Copeland -- the first African American woman to become principal dancer at the American Ballet Theatre -- and Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg. 

"Each woman here has a story that is very valuable...it's very democratic -- not one woman here is more important than any other," Leibovitz said. 

"I felt like there is a new feeling of confidence in the women sitting and having their photographs taken. They seem to know much more who they are and what they're doing, much more than where we were in 1999."

Leibovitz says she hopes to work further with Yousafzai and with Myanmar's veteran activist, now foreign minister, Aung San Suu Kyi, also in the collection. 

But while her new subjects are all leaders in their field, not all were comfortable in front of the camera.

British primatologist Jane Goodall declared that she preferred going to the dentist than having her photo taken, before sticking her tongue out, says Leibovitz. 

"I got back to my studio and realised 'oh my goodness' it's like I'm a primate -- she's communicating with me with her face and her eyes and sticking out her tongue. 

"If I was an orangutan I'd be madly in love with her," she laughs.

Still, the shoot produced a soft close-up portrait of Goodall, tongue in.   

Leibovitz says she sympathises with hesitant subjects.

"Who wants to have their photo taken?" she asks. 

"It's such a moment of having to confront yourself and who you are, what do you look like, who do you look like, do you look good, is it a good hair day, and your soul. It's complicated!"




© 1994-2016 Agence France-Presse










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