- The Brown Sisters, Woodstock, Vermont
Sheet: 7 15/16 × 9 15/16 in. (20.2 × 25.2 cm)
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Nick Nixon’s annual photographs of his wife, Bebe, and her three sisters chart the psychological and physical processes of maturation and aging and record the bonds of sisterhood. When Nixon made his first successful picture of the four sisters in July 1975, Bebe (Beverly Brown) was 25, her sister Heather was 23, Laurie was 21, and Mimi was 15. A year later, in June 1976, the sisters gathered again for Laurie’s college graduation. “And that’s when I took the second one,” Nixon later recalled, “and kind of on a whim, said let’s do it in the same order. So it was having two pictures in my hand, and the year space between them that gave me the idea that it would be really interesting to do it forever. And so I asked them if we could. And they all laughed at me and said sure.” For 39 years now, the sisters have stood before Nixon’s camera, always in the same order—Heather, Mimi, Bebe, Laurie—for what has become a courageous “annual rite of passage.” From the dozen or more negatives that Nixon shoots each year, he chooses a single image as the latest installment in the series.
For The Brown Sisters and all of his work, Nixon bucked the trend of handheld, shoot-from-the-hip photography prevalent in the 1970s by opting instead for a tripod-mounted, large-format camera that produced 8 x 10-inch negatives. His photographs, contact-printed so that there is no loss of detail through enlargement, are intimate in scale but filled with visual information.
ProvenanceThe artist; [Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco]; purchased by Manfred Heiting; purchased by MFAH, 2002.
Exhibition HistoryAcquisitions of the Last Five Years: Selections of Modern and Contemporary Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Upper Brown Pavilion, July 15, 2005 - October 15, 2005.
“Nicholas Nixon: The Brown Sisters,” The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, May 19-August 3, 2014.
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