Harper's Bazaar, April 1950 Solomon, Lillian Bassman: Women, p. 121
Catalogue Essay
Lillian Bassman’s stunning fashion photographs evoke a timeless elegance that combines her brilliant sense of the photographic frame with the delicate sweep of a painter’s brush. Under the tutelage of Alexey Brodovitch, the legendary art director, her photographs graced the pages of Harper’s Bazaar and Seventeen in the 1940s and 1950s. Bassman’s mastery of the darkroom helped her define an aesthetic that would set her apart from her contemporaries Richard Avedon and Irving Penn. Using her negatives as a mere starting point, she would then blur, bleach and stain her prints in an effort to realize her full vision. The result, as we see here in her most celebrated work Across the Restaurant, Barbara Mullen, dress by Jacques Fath, Le Grand Vefour, Paris, 1949, are striking images that hover somewhere between a photograph and a painting.