Friday, June 17, 2011

The Last Sitting

In 1962, photographer Bert Stern shot a series of photos of Marilyn Monroe for Vogue magazine that have collectively come to be known as The Last Sitting. Taken during several boozy sessions in Suite 261 at the Hotel Bel-Air in June, photographs are arguably the most famous images ever captured of Monroe, sleepy-eyed and naked, sips from a Champagne glass, enacts a fan dance of sorts with various diaphanous scarves, romps with erotic playfulness on a bed of white linens.

The three-day session yielded nearly 2,600 pictures - fashion, portrait, and nude studies - of indescribable sensual and human vibrancy, of which no more than 20 were published. And yet these few photographs ineradicably shaped our image of Marilyn Monroe. The complete collection of photographs is displayed within the book Marilyn Monroe: The Complete Last Sitting. Showing many of the photographs that were never released and an insight of Bert Stern’s memories of the sitting where he saw a vulnerable, confused woman who although at the apex of her career, had relinquished control of her life.

Six weeks after she had posed for Stern, Monroe was found dead of an apparent barbiturate overdose. The Last Sitting produced extraordinarily beautiful and unique images of Marilyn.