<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>The renowned photographer Catherine Opie takes on a challenging documentary project-- an -indirect portrait- of Elizabeth Taylor through her home and possessions.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>The renowned photographer Catherine Opie takes on a challenging documentary project-- an indirect portrait of Elizabeth Taylor through her home and possessions. One of America's most celebrated living photographers, Catherine Opie works in series that are remarkably varied in<br>both style and subject matter--from intimate portraits of the<br>LGBTQ community to beautiful, nearly-abstract landscapes<br>featuring ice-fishing houses. Expanding that astonishing<br>range of subjects further is Opie's ambitious recent series of<br>photographs taken at the home of late movie star Elizabeth<br>Taylor. Though glamour and celebrity are not common<br>themes in her work, Opie was inspired by the possibilities this<br>project offered--recalling William Eggleston's series on Elvis<br>Presley's Graceland, or her own photographs of Obama's<br>2008 inauguration, both of which represent indirect portraits<br>of their subjects. The images in this moving collection<br>were culled from photos Opie took over the course of six<br>months, both on the grounds of and inside Taylor's home.<br>The subjects are wildly diverse--a dog-eared remote control<br>manual, close-ups of Taylor's enormous closets, shelves of<br>tchotchkes and priceless works of art--telling more about<br>Taylor's life than any celebrity portrait ever could. Through<br>Opie's thoughtful curation, Taylor's home tells a poignant<br>story and reveals the arc of a fascinating life.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Midway through the project [Elizabeth Taylor] was hospitalised, and on March 23 2011 she passed away. As an artist it was an emotional and moving time for me to bear witness to her life and to her loss. Her home underwent many changes following her death. These photographs reflect that transition in a subtle way, while still maintaining an intimate portrait of Elizabeth Taylor through her personal space.--Catherine Opie, as quoted in the <i>Financial Times<br></i><br>Liz Taylor never let a photographer into her home--until Catherine Opie came along. The result is as visual paean to the life (and loss) of a legend . . . Flipping through [<i>700 Nimes Road</i>], you feel a little like a child stealing into her mother's room to run her hands over dresses and rummage through drawers. All that's missing is the scent of Taylor's perfume.--<i>Town & Country<br></i><br>Not long before she passed away in 2011 at age 79, Elizabeth [Taylor] opened up her surprisingly cozy six-bedroom, six-bath LA house to photographer Catherine Opie. The spectacular results can be found in the new book and exhibition named after the actress' Bel Air address, <i>700 Nimes Road</i> . . . And while the space is every bit as stunning as the actress herself, Opie points out that it 'wasn't just pristine--it was a well-loved and well-used home, too . . . Everything had value to her, from the Krupp Diamond ... to the stuffed animal that leaned against a little rocker.' --<i>Closer</i> <p/>Although the two never met in person, Opie's new book . . . assumes a powerful, shared intimacy through [her] pictures of Taylor's shoes, jewelry, heirlooms, and other artifacts of fame and family. --<i>WMagazine.com<br></i><br>She was one of the most photographed women in the world--but these quiet pictures of her Bel Air home, which she allowed just before her death in 2011, reveal more about Elizabeth Taylor than any portrait.--<i>People Magazine <p/></i>"Catherine Opie's photographs of Elizabeth Taylor's curtains, closet, and kitchen--taken in 2010 and 2011, the year that Taylor died--are elegiac and stately, and deeply revealing of Taylor's interior life." --Alex Abramovich, <i>The New Yorker</i><br>
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