Gillian Laub

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Gillian Laub
Born1975
New York
OccupationPhotographer & Filmmarker
NationalityAmerican

Gillian Laub (born 1975) is an American photographer and film maker based New York. She graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a degree in comparative literature before studying photography at the International Center of Photography.

Life[]

Gillian Laub was born in 1975 in Chappaqua, New York.[1]

Work[]

Laub is known for her documentary portraits of families, friends and strangers, which she describes as 'search of a deeper understanding of family and tribe in all its forms'.

Her exhibition Common Ground (Israelis and Palestinians) placed Palestinian and Israeli children, families, and even soldiers next to each other, leaving the viewer wondering which person belongs to which culture.

An American Life intimately documents Laub’s own family, portraying moments in various members of her extended family from Florida to New York City, as well as the Westchester suburbs.

Laub’s Dateline Israel was shown at the Jewish Museum in New York City in 2007. That same year her first monograph Testimony, which includes fifty portraits of Israeli Jews, Israeli Arabs, displaced Lebanese families, and Palestinians, was published by Aperture, which also presented her with an Emerging Artist’s Award.[2][3] “To consider these images is to be reminded not just of human cruelty and human stupidity but also of human tenacity.”

Laub’s work is contained in the collection of many museums, including the International Center of Photography, New York, NY, the Museum of Fine Art, Houston, TX, the Terrana Collection, Boston, MA, and the Jewish Museum, New York, NY, among others. She regularly photographs for Time and the New York Times Magazine, among many other publications.

Laub is the recipient of the Aaron Siskind fellowship and Jerome Foundation Grant. She is represented by Benrubi Gallery.[4] Laub's first feature - length documentary film, also titled Southern Rites, was released on HBO in Spring 2015.

Personal life[]

Laub is Jewish. In a Tablet Magazine interview by Elisa Albert, Laub describes that, while filming Southern Rites, some of the people in southern Georgia (in towns such as Vidalia and Mount Vernon) thought Laub was of Mexican or Italian descent, but when Laub told them she was Jewish, she found that "they didn't really know what [Laub being Jewish] meant." In the same Tablet Magazine interview, Laub recounts that she "was the ethnic girl" in a "very affluent and very white" town.[5]

Bibliography[]

  • Gillian Laub, Southern Rites, Bologna, Italy, Damiani, 2015 ISBN 9788862084130 [6]
  • Ariella Azoulay, Raef Zreik, and Lesley A. Martin, Testimony, New York, Aperture, 2007 ISBN 9781597110129 [7]
  • Liana Satenstein, "After Leaving Orthodox Judaism, Women Forge a New Identity in the Secular World," Vogue, March 8, 2018[8]

Sources[]

  1. ^ "About". Gillian Laub. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Gillian Laub Southern Rites ARTBOOK | D.A.P. 2015 Catalog Damiani Books Exhibition Catalogues 9788862084130". www.artbook.com. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  3. ^ http://www.artbook.com. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ "GILLIAN LAUB | Benrubi Gallery | New York City based Art Gallery specializing in Photography". benrubigallery.com. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  5. ^ "A Conversation With Gillian Laub." Albert, Elisa. www.tabletmag.com The Tablet. Published October 8, 2015. Accessed February 24, 2021.
  6. ^ "Gillian Laub Southern Rites ARTBOOK | D.A.P. 2015 Catalog Damiani Books Exhibition Catalogues 9788862084130". www.artbook.com. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  7. ^ Azoulay, Ariella; Zreik, Raef; Martin, Lesley A. (2007). Testimony. Aperture. ISBN 9781597110129.
  8. ^ Satenstein, Liana. "After Leaving Orthodox Judaism, Women Forge a New Identity in the Secular World". Vogue. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
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