Events Venues Restaurants Movies Performers
Home | Register | Log In
San Francisco, CA    [change my location]
Annie Leibovitz
Average Ratings
Media: (no rating)
Users: (1)
You: (no rating)
Write a Review
Is this your event?

Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life, 1990-2005

Saturday, May 17 9:30a to 5:15p
Price: $15 for adults, $12 for seniors 65 and over, $11 for youth 13-17 and students with ID
Age Suitability: None Specified
Tags: There are no tags.

For decades, Annie Leibovitz has artistically captured the icons of popular culture with her award-winning photography. Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer’s Life, 1990–2005 looks at 200 of these photos as well as those she has taken of her family and close friends, and thus views a full “photographer’s life.” As Leibovitz says: “I don’t have two lives. This is one life, and the personal pictures and the assignment work are all part of it.”

Included in this exhibition are portraits of the pregnant Demi Moore, Nelson Mandela in Soweto, and George W. Bush in the White House; searing photo-journalism from the siege of Sarajevo; haunting landscapes from the American West and Jordan; and personal photos documenting the birth of her three daughters and other scenes of private family life.

Category: Museums
Creator:  Reporter_Design
Creator:  Reporter_Design
Performers at this Event
Annie Leibovitz
Annie Leibovitz Remove performer from this event
Born in 1949 in Waterbury, Connecticut, Annie Leibovitz enrolled in the San Francisco Art Institute intent on studying painting. It was not until she traveled to Japan with her mother the summer after her sophomore year that she discovered her interest in taking photographs.
Location & Nearby Info
California Palace of the Legion of Honor
100 34th Ave
San Francisco, CA 94121
(415) 221-2233
Reviews & Comments
USER REVIEWS
Icon_1146
Top 50
Reviewer
60 reviews
May 13, 2008 - mmelmon on Annie Leibovitz
The mistress of tasteful sexy chic

To think a bunch of useless idiots would subject an artist of this caliber to a "scandal" over pictures of a Mousekatwinklestick's upper back. Perhaps there is some truth to human civilization imploding in 2012.