![Eve and Marilyn: Making an Icon \u2013 Emily Brady](https://cdn.stayhappening.com/events5/banners/63a5c0cda2c34ad2b73a821e6e00ed5c8a11c3b8b3aa964eeedd3a0db1ff86ae-rimg-w782-h700-dce8e8e8-gmir.jpg?v=1716352430)
About this Event
![Event Photos](https://cdn.stayhappening.com/events1/banners/776d8520-17f4-11ef-9430-f964bf920b4c-rimg-w720-h842-dc010101-gmir.jpg)
In 1951, Marilyn Monroe saw a photograph that Magnum’s first female photographer – Eve Arnold – had taken of Marlene Dietrich in Esquire. Immediately struck by Arnold’s talent with the camera, and aware of her power as a photographic subject, Monroe coyly remarked: If you could do that well with Marlene, imagine what you could do with me. What followed was a decade-long collaboration. As Marilyn became an icon, Eve Arnold lamented the ways in which Monroe had been mistreated and misrepresented by the media.
In 1987, she published Marilyn Monroe: An Appreciation – a volume that spoke back to lewd representations of Marilyn Monroe and explored the woman behind the icon. As Arnold grappled with what it meant to be a ‘woman photographer,’ she also grappled with both her own legacy and the legacy of one of Hollywood’s most tragic figures.
Dr Emily Brady is a cultural historian, interested in the intersections of race, gender and class in visual protest cultures.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Kendrew Barn, Kendrew Barn, Oxford, United Kingdom
USD 0.00