Archive - 2003 - Bibliography

Date

Inside Art

Publication Date: 
November 7, 2003
Publication: 
New York Times
Author: 
Vogel, Carol

The New York Times
ARTS: November 7, 2003

INSIDE ART - By Carol Vogel

An Archive of Faces

In 1979 Timothy Greenfield-Sanders began photographing figures in the art world — artists and dealers, critics and curators, museum directors and collectors. Twenty years later he had amassed 700 portraits. In his archives were everyone from Abstract Expressionist painters like Willem de Kooning to top dealers like Leo Castelli.

Photographing the Famous, Even Those of an X-Rated World

Publication Date: 
July 29, 2003
Publication: 
New York Times
Author: 
Gussow, Mel

By MEL GUSSOW New York Times July 29, 2003

In Timothy Greenfield-Sanders's studio, the ground floor in a former rectory on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, famous artists, novelists, actors and politicians come to be photographed. Toni Morrison, Brian Dennehy and James Watson each sat for a formal portrait recently, and Gore Vidal, Norman Mailer and Kurt Vonnegut were brought together for a surprisingly fraternal literary trifecta that appeared in Vanity Fair. And then there was Gina Lynn, who on a July afternoon also posed before Mr. Greenfield-Sanders's Deardorff camera.

Famed Lensman Tackles Porn

Publication Date: 
May 16, 2003
Publication: 
New York Post
Author: 
Johnson, Richard

FAMED LENSMAN TACKLES PORN
May 16, 2003

PHOTOGRAPHER Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, who is known for his portraits of the famous and talented from Orson Welles to Sen. Hillary Clinton, has lately been taking pictures of porn stars.

"Everyone's posing with their clothes on and with their clothes off," Greenfield-Sanders told PAGE SIX.

The photos will appear in a book, "XXX," along with essays on pornography by Adam Gopnik, John Malkovich, A.M. Holmes, Whitley Strieber, Nancy Friday and Bret Easton Ellis.

Mailer Blasts Back at Comic

Publication Date: 
May 9, 2003
Publication: 
New York Post
Author: 
Staff

MAILER BLASTS BACK AT COMIC

DON'T invite Dennis Miller and Norman Mailer to the same party.

Miller trashed Mailer in a May 5 op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal for the novelist's arguments against President Bush's liberation of Iraq. And now Mailer has responded with a "Dear Dennis" letter, published in the Journal yesterday.

"Just because the two big guys who flanked you on 'Monday Night Football' took away your [bleeps] and left you with a giggle in replacement doesn't mean you have to suck up to the Wall Street Journal," Mailer wrote.