I acquired Vivianās negatives while at a furniture and antique auction while researching a history book I was co-authoring on Chicagoās NW Side. From what I know, the auction house acquired her belongings from her storage locker that was sold off due to delinquent payments. I didnāt know what āstreet photographyā was when I purchased them.
It took me days to look through all of her work. It inspired me to pick up photography myself. Little by little, as I progressed as a photographer, I would revisit Vivianās negatives and I would āseeā more in her work. I bought her same camera and took to the same streets soon to realize how difficult it was to make images of her caliber. I discovered the eye she had for photography through my own practice. Needless to say, I am attached to her work.
After some researching, I have only little information about Vivian. Central Camera (110 yr old camera shop in Chicago) has encountered Vivian from time to time when she would purchase film while out on the Chicago streets. From what they knew of her, they say she was a very ākeep your distance from meā type of person but was also outspoken. She loved foreign films and didnāt care much for American films.
Some of her photos have pictures of children and often times it was near a beach. I later found out she was a nanny for a family on the North Side whose children these most likely were. One of her obituaries states that she lived in Oak Park, a close Chicago suburb, but I later found that she lived in the Rogers Park neighborhood.
Out of the more than 100,000 negatives I have in the collection, about 20-30,000 negatives were still in rolls, undeveloped from the 1960ās-1970ās. I have been successfully developing these rolls. I must say, itās very exciting for me. Most of her negatives that were developed in sleeves have the date and location penciled in French (she had poor penmanship).
I found her name written with pencil on a photo-lab envelope. I decided to āGoogleā her about a year after I purchased these only to find her obituary placed the day before my search. She passed only a couple of days before that inquiry on her.
I wanted to meet her in person well before I found her obituary but, the auction house had stated she was ill, so I didnāt want to bother her. So many questions would have been answered if I had.
ā John Maloof, Vivian Maier - Her Discovered Work, 2010 (via)