Neil Selkirk
Photographer and filmmaker
Now on view
Neil Selkirk is a photographer and filmmaker. Shortly after he arrived in New York from London in 1970, he met Diane Arbus.
He took her master class and, after her death, wound up being the only person ever authorized to make posthumous prints of her work.
As a photographer, he has worked for virtually all the major US magazines. He has specialized in the creation of new publications, having been involved with the first issues and covers of Wired, Spy,Colors, Paper, and Vue.
He has published four books of photographs: 1000 on 42nd Street (2000), See No Evil (2006), Lobbyists (2007), and Certain Women (2015).
His photographs are in major US collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
He took her master class and, after her death, wound up being the only person ever authorized to make posthumous prints of her work.
As a photographer, he has worked for virtually all the major US magazines. He has specialized in the creation of new publications, having been involved with the first issues and covers of Wired, Spy,Colors, Paper, and Vue.
He has published four books of photographs: 1000 on 42nd Street (2000), See No Evil (2006), Lobbyists (2007), and Certain Women (2015).
His photographs are in major US collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
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What Diane Arbus Wasn’t Doing (Part II) and How She Wasn’t Doing It
From July 8, 2023