

The exhibition, to mark what would have been Avedon's 100th birthday, brings together close to 150 images drawn from every corner of his six-decade career as a fashion photographer and portraitist and selected by the likes of Hilton Als, Naomi Campbell, Thelma Golden, Elton John, Tyler Mitchell, and Kate Moss. It begins with the couplet “You must not think because my glance is quick / To shift from this to that, from here to there,” and concludes, “I know my drifting will not prove a loss, / For mine is a rolling stone that has gathered moss.”Ī sampling of what Avedon found as he ventured out into the world with his camera will be on view in “Avedon 100,” opening on May 4 at the West 21st Street outpost of Gagosian gallery in New York. Avedon’s winning entry in the 1941 Scholastic Art & Writing competition was a poem called “Wanderlust,” in which the narrator appears eager to leave home in search of new people, places, and experiences despite those who caution him to take a more conventional path. It’s a tiny factoid that bobs like a little buoy in the great sea of accolades that has surrounded his body of work as a photographer-one he began creating in earnest at Harper’s Bazaar in the waning days of the Second World War and continued to restlessly reshape and reimagine until his death in 2004 at the age of 81. Richard Avedon once won a teen poetry contest. Photomat, Richard Avedon, photographer, with James Baldwin, writer, New York, September 1, 1964.
