American Photo Magazine
  • Browse Full Site
    • Most Recent
    • Landscapes
    • Portfolios
    • Books
    • Street Photography
    • The Internet
    • On the Wall
    • Studio Work
    • Model Shoot
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Digital Editions
    • iPad
    • Kindle
    • Nook
    • Zinio
  • RSS

Tim Mantoani's Portraits of Portraits

Capturing the visionaries behind great photographs

  • By Lindsay Comstock on January 27, 2012
  • 0 Comments
    • Tweet
Expand

Amy Arbus

With two of her portraits

© Tim Mantoani

  • prev
  • …
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • …
  • next

Most successful photographers are better known for the images they create than for what they look like. Even their names tend not to show up very big. “The credit a photographer gets is usually six-point font in the gutter of a magazine,” says commercial photographer Tim Mantoani. 

Five years ago Mantoani began a project designed to pay tribute to the faces behind great pictures. Using the massive Polaroid 20x24-inch format (see page 50 for more details), he portrays each photographer holding his or her favorite image, underscored by a hand-written inscription, creating a layered, three-part narrative in each portrait.

The project began as a keepsake of Mantoani’s friendship with music shooter Jim Marshall, who posed holding his image of Johnny Cash flipping off the camera during a sound check at San Quentin. That memento sparked the idea for a full-blown project that snowballed as Mantoani sought out other creators of images that inspired him to take up photography. “I wanted to show that these photographers are real people,” he says. “Most of them were just doing their job. They didn’t realize that their work would have the significance it has today.”

844 Expand

© Tim Mantoani

Nick Ut
With his famous Vietnam photo of a young girl after a napalm strike at Trang Bang Village

© Tim Mantoani

Mantoani usually allowed his subjects to choose which photographs to feature, collaborating with them to reveal personalities who aren’t typically in front of the camera. Lois Greenfield, known for her study of motion, came to the studio with a stack of square photos and threw them in the air; William Wegman brought a life-size cut-out of his dog Bobbin. Street photographer Fred Gurner chose an image of the reclusive Diane Arbus that features her Mamiya C33; Daniel Kramer posed with his cover shot for Bob Dylan’s Bringing It All Back Home. Once Mantoani started accepting referrals for subjects, he ended up with a Who’s Who list that included Neil Leifer, Mary Ellen Mark, Elliot Erwitt, Douglas Kirkland, Bob Gruen and Steve McCurry.

“Most of them were just doing their job. They didn’t realize that their work would have the significance it has today.”

There was no shortage of logistical challenges, many of which stemmed from Mantoani’s use of Polaroid 20x24, one of the more esoteric film formats. Of the six massive cameras that shoot it, only three are in the United States, and the film they take was discontinued in 2008. 

Still, New York–based 20x24 Studio arranged to obtain adequate film inventory and production equipment to facilitate Mantoani’s project, allowing him to make enough pictures for a book—Behind Photographs: Archiving Photographic Legends (Channel Photographics, $60)—which features portraits of 158 photographers. Still, at a cost of nearly $200 per exposure plus camera rental, the book could only have been done as a labor of love. Partially self-published, it includes a varnish coat on the pictures to make them look and feel like Polaroid prints.

Because of the intellectual property featured in these images, Mantoani does not intend to sell the prints, although he hopes that one day they will end up in a museum collection as an archive of some of the great photographers of our time. “I hope future generations will be able to not just appreciate famous images,” Mantoani says, “but the photographers as well.” AP

 

CLOSE-UP: Tim Mantoani 

790 Expand
© Chris Park

Lives In San Diego, CA
Studied At Brooks Institute, Santa Barbara, CA
Awards Brooks Institute Distinguished Alumni Award, 2011
Other Projects Recently built a football field in the middle of Times Square for an EA Sports Madden NFL 12 cover shoot
In the Bag For Behind Photo-graphs: 20x24 Polaroid camera, 20x24 Wisner camera, Broncolor and Profoto strobes, Chimera Super Pro softbox and California Sunbounce reflectors. For commercial work: Canon EOS-1D Mark IV and EOS 5D Mark II DSLRs, lenses from 18 to 300mm, Phase One camera body and P45+ digital back
Site: mantoani.com

Related Tags:
Books, Portfolios, portraits, Studio Work, Tim Mantoani
This article was originally published in American Photo January/February 2012

Comments

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
Subscribe to American Photo
Subscribe to American Photo






  • Subscribe
  • Customer Service
  • Contact Us
  • Media Kit
  • Abuse
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Newsletter Signup

Copyright © 2013 Bonnier Corporation. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Most Recent

A Rare Look at the "Uncontacted" People of Tí

Photojournalism of the Week: May 24, 2013

War Through a Woman's Eyes

A Photographic Ode to the Laundromat

2013 World Press Photo Winner Controversy

Interview: Fred Ritchin On Establishing Standards For Digital Manipulation

Photojournalism of the Week: May 17, 2013

Landscapes

A Fresh Look At…Trees?

Altered Images

Books of the Year: Anup Shah's Serengeti Spy

Peter Wegner's Buildings Made of Sky

"Looking at the Land," a Digital Survey of 21st-Century Landscape Photography

On the Wall: Ori Gersht's Haunting Lives, Still and Otherwise

+ See all Landscapes

Portfolios

On the Wall: A Colorful Miasma In the Bronson Caves

Turkish Sports Cars, and the Men Who Customize Them

On the Wall: Andy Freeberg's Art For Art's Sake

Still Life, With Newt

After Catastrophe, Photographs To Help Rebuild

Better Late

+ See all Portfolios

Books

A Fresh Look At…Trees?

Books: Nigel Shafran's Teenage Precinct Shoppers

A Photobook With No End

Alec Soth, Reporting From The Valleys of Silicon, San Joaquin, and Death

Diving Into The Americans

The Fashion Photography of Viviane Sassen

+ See all Books

Street Photography

Instagram Watch: Firefighter Gabriel Angemi Portrait of Camden

William Klein + Daido Moriyama in London

On The Wall: California Strangers

A Gutted City, 40 Years Later

On the Wall: Ari Marcopoulos

XCIA: Street Illegal

+ See all Street Photography

The Internet

Photobooks Worth Their Weight in Gold? There's an App For That

A Master's Work—Now Available in PDF Form

Instagram Watch: Todd Hido

Behind the Notes: Joachim Robert's Paris Skyline

Photojournalists Move To Instagram, From Syria to Sandy

At the Intersection of War and Fashion, a Compelling Controversy

+ See all The Internet

On the Wall

Before There Was Google Street View, There Was Ed Ruscha

On the Wall: A Colorful Miasma In the Bronson Caves

Exhibits to Watch in 2013: Irving Penn's "Underfoot"

Exhibits to Watch in 2013: Bill Brandt at MoMA

The Fashion Photography of Viviane Sassen

Nine Top Photographers "Remix" Classic Photo Books That Inspired Them

+ See all On the Wall

Studio Work

Some Great Work in This Year's PDN 30

Behind the Notes: Valerio Loi's Vials of Emotion

Howard Schatz: With Child

Tim Mantoani's Portraits of Portraits

The Art of the Splash

Wild Style

+ See all Studio Work