4 Sisters Took The Same Photo for 43 Years
Mel Johnson
Photographer Nicholas Nixon has been taking the same photo of 4 sisters for over 4 decades. And watching these siblings grow year after year is utterly captivating!
Nicholas was 26 and the year was 1974 when he snapped the first photo of 4 sisters. He picked up his camera to take a snapshot of his wife, Bebe (née Brown), who was 25 at the time, with her siblings Heather (23), Mimi (15), and Laurie (21). But he was unhappy with how the photo turned out, so he threw the negative away.
In 1975, he tried again. And then the now-infamous portrait quickly became an annual tradition.
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1975
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
Nicolas snapped another photo of 4 sisters a year later when Laurie graduated from college. And from there, Bebe and her sisters agreed to pose together in the same order annually for a single photo to represent themselves each year.
1976
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
The Museum of Modern Art in New York displayed the full series back in 2014 to coincide with the release of the museum's book,
The Brown Sisters: Forty Years. But since then, Nicolas has continued taking annual snapshots, and just released the 43rd image in the series.
1985
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
Photo Of 4 Sisters Spans Decade After Decade
Behind each picture lurks a year's worth of stories. But don't expect Nicholas to supply you with a lot of detail other than the image. Other than a few interviews with museums who feature his work, (seen below) he mostly keeps quiet about what's going on
behind the scenes, bringing a tantalizing element of mystery to each portrait.
“The world is infinitely more interesting than any of my opinions about it,” he said.
1992
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
Nicolas chooses to use a large format camera instead of the smaller 35mm camera that most professional photographers switched to decades ago.
When asked why, he explained, "When photography went to the small camera and quick takes, it showed thinner and thinner slices of time, [unlike] early photography where time seemed non-changing. I like greater chunks, myself."
1995
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
We all know how much can happen in a year and how easy it is to let life get in the way. Yet, year after year the sisters continue to gather for their annual photo. The commitment in that alone is remarkable.
But what's most intriguing about the photo series is how boldly it documents these 4 lovely ladies doing something Hollywood tries so hard to erase -- aging.
2000
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
Nowadays, we're bombarded with images of women who've been done up then airbrushed, photoshopped and edited to erase any sign of "imperfection" such as aging. And yet, growing older is exactly how God designed our bodies.
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Nothing in this world was ever designed to be permanent. Our time here is temporary. And as believers, that knowledge is exciting. Rather than cling to this world, we are to anticipate the everlasting rewards God has planned for us in the afterlife.
2005
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
Too often we look in the mirror and feel dissatisfied with what we see. Aging seems scary and we look for ways to delay its effect. But that's because we're comparing ourselves to what the world says matters.
2010
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
But God is the one who made us. He looks at us and loves us the same -- year after year, decade after decade.
"Do not love the world or anything in the world. If anyone loves the world, love for the Father is not in them. For everything in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—comes not from the Father but from the world. The world and its desires pass away, but whoever does the will of God lives forever." 1 John 2: 15-17
2012
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
So, keep that in mind as you scroll through the decades with this small sampling of the 43 photos of these 4 beautiful sisters.
2017
Credit: Nicholas Nixon
WATCH: Artist Nicholas Nixon Talks About Sisters Photo Series
WATCH: Nicholas Nixon on Sisters and His Latest Project
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h/t:
The New Yorker
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