Photographs tell story of decades-long romance
CHICAGO --
Ninety-one-year-old Art Shay has been telling stories with his camera for 60
years. Working mostly for LIFE Magazine, he captured an amazing roster of
subjects, from Kennedy to Ali; from Eleanor Roosevelt to Elizabeth Taylor.
Asked if Florence would ever say, “Would you put that camera away, for God’s sake?” Shay says, “Yes, many times.”
“And, you know, the litany of all true photographers is, ‘Just one more,’” he laughs. “A photograph is a biography of a moment.”
Strung together, they chart a lifetime.
The photos of their love story are now on display in an exhibition co-presented by the Museum of Contemporary Photography and the Library at Columbia College Chicago. The exhibit is called “My Florence,” a tribute to their 67 years of marriage.
Shay says
it makes him feel closer to Florence. He says the last picture he took of her
that is featured in the show was captured four weeks before she died.
Shay says that when she got sick, “I assigned myself to do her life as I remembered it -- with the joy, the happiness and only a touch -- a touch of her sickness.”
Florence
passed away from cancer in August 2012. Art says gathering the photos for the
show has helped him heal, though not entirely.
“Florence did say, ‘Don’t cry for me when the time comes, because I had a wonderful life,’” he says. “And she did. And we did.”
The evidence is right there in the pictures.