Lee Miller

154 Pins
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two women and a man sitting on a bed in front of a painting, one reading a book
Penrose, Sir Roland
Lee Miller; Roland Penrose, by Cecil Beaton, mid 1960s
three people sitting at a table with food in front of them and one person standing over the table
Lee Miller: the model, the monster and the mother
Nusch Eluard, Jean Cocteau and unknown man, Paris, France, 1944. Photograph: Lee Miller - #O.Lettera.Ti - @Libriamo Tutti - http://www.libriamotutti.it/
Max Ernst and Dorothea Tanning at Sedona, Arizona - taken by Lee Miller, 1946 Sedona Arizona, Dada Artists, Dorothea Tanning, Leonora Carrington, Artist Collective, Mexican Artists
Hobbies for College Students: Art, Sports, Cooking, and Other Ideas
Max Ernst and Dorothea Tanning at Sedona, Arizona - taken by Lee Miller, 1946
a person standing in front of a house with fire coming out of the roof and windows
The world of old photography
Lee Miller: Eagles Nest in Flames, Berchtesgaden, Germany, 1945 Lee Miller and David Scherman witnessed what Scherman described as ‘The funeral pyre of the Third Reich’ – Hitler’s house ‘Wachenfeld’ in flames after the retreating SS had torched it. The war ended two days later.
a woman sitting in front of a mirror while talking on a cell phone
Lee Miller
an old black and white photo of a man hugging a woman's head with her arm around him
Lee Miller, Theodore Miller | Centre Pompidou
Man Ray, Lee Miller & Theodore Miller (Lee Miller and her father), 1931
a woman standing on top of a car looking at her cell phone while wearing a hat
lee-miller | Tumblr
1943. Lee Miller photographiant des ramasseurs de ferraille. Angleterre. Photo de David E. Sherman
a woman riding a bike with a dog in the basket on the street next to her
Vogue covergirl, fashion photographer and war reporter: Extraordinary life of Lee Miller and how these never before seen pictures reveal full range of her work
In 1944, Lee Miller heard a rumour that her beloved Paris was on the verge of liberation. She headed to the French capital knowing that she might not be the 'first woman journalist on the scene' but she would be the 'first dame photographer.' Her wartime articles were some of the most arresting