Street photographer. Documentary filmmaker. Painter. Fiction filmmaker. Abstract photographer. Writer. Fashion photographer. Illustrator. Maker of books. Designer of exhibitions. To have made original and influential work in just one of these fields would have been enough to secure William Klein a place in any canon of the visual arts. To have succeeded in them all, on his own terms, and to have sustained a creative output for over six decades, is remarkable.
For a long time, Klein was known as either a fashion photographer or a street photographer or a filmmaker. That is to say, different audiences knew and valued different aspects of his work. Only in recent years has the scope of his achievements begun to be recognised. Versatility runs against the idea that artistic significance is based on single themes and recurring preoccupations. Today, however, it is accepted that the artists who ranged freely and avoided specialism are key to understanding the culture of the past century.
In Yes, we have a chronology of Klein’s often breathless development, allowing the connections between his different practices to become apparent. Almost from the start, he was proceeding on several fronts at once. When he was shooting his now- celebrated street photography in New York in 1954-55, he was also breaking new ground in fashion photography at Vogue magazine, while exploring abstraction in the darkroom and on canvas. Switching between media, between cultural frameworks, between studio and street, the similarities were as stark as the differences. The switches became even more important when Klein turned to filmmaking. The visual energy of his documentary and fiction films evolved directly out of still photography.
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