Arnold Newman Imogen Cunningham 1969 gelatin silver print Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri |
Leland Rice Untitled 1969 gelatin silver print Art Institute of Chicago |
Lora Verner Mannequin at Biba Boutique, Kensington High Street, London 1969 gelatin silver print Victoria & Albert Museum, London |
Ruth Bernhard Rice Paper 1969 gelatin silver print Princeton University Art Museum |
Larry Clark Self Portrait with Teenagers 1969 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Paul Caponigro Redding Wood ca. 1969 gelatin silver print Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri |
Danny Lyon Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc. ca. 1969 gelatin silver print Minneapolis Institute of Art |
Jo Alison Feiler Mother in Grandma's Bedroom behind Curtain 1969 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Jo Alison Feiler Untitled 1969 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Duane Michals The Annunciation 1969 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Duane Michals The Moments before the Tragedy 1969 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Joel Meyerowitz Small Circus, Spain 1970 C-print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Leonard Freed Soldiers in front of Beauty Boutique, Connecticut 1970 gelatin silver print Princeton University Art Museum |
Don McCullin Londonderry 1970 gelatin silver print Victoria & Albert Museum, London |
Marc Riboud De Gaulle Funeral 1970 gelatin silver print Los Angeles County Museum of Art |
Raghubir Singh Manek Chowk, Jaipur 1970 C-print Milwaukee Art Museum |
The Tragedy of Hats
is that you can never see the one you're wearing,
that no one believes the lies they tell,
that they grow to be more famous than you,
that you could die in one but you won't be buried in it.
That we use them to create dogs
in our own image. That the dogs
in their mortarboards and baseball caps and veils
crush our hubris with their unconcern.
That Norma Desmond's flirty cocktail hat flung aside
left a cowlick that doomed her. That two old ladies
catfighting in Hutzler's Better Dresses both wore flowered
straw. Of my grandmother the amateur hatmaker,
this legend: that the holdup man at the Mercantile
turned to say Madam I love your hat before
he shot the teller dead who'd giggled at her
homemade velvet roses. O happy tragedy of hats!
That they make us mimic classic gestures,
inspiring pleasure first, then pity and then fear.
See how we tip them, hold them prettily against the wind
or pull them off and mop our sweaty brows
like our beloved foolish dead in photographs.
Like farmers plowing under the ancient sun.
– Clarinda Harriss (1999)