Bruce Weber: Try a Little Tenderness, on view from April 9 through June 6, 2026 at Fahey/Klein Gallery, unfolds as an intimate reflection on the formation of an artist. Bringing together photographs produced across several decades, the exhibition reveals how personal relationships, early experiences, and creative encounters shape the visual language of Bruce Weber. Rather than presenting a chronological survey, the selection moves through moments of influence and memory, offering a portrait of artistic growth rooted in lived experience.
Weber’s early years in Greensburg play a defining role in this narrative. Introduced to image-making through family life, he experiments with drawing and filmmaking before receiving his first camera, an Argus C3, at a young age. His later studies at New York University and his encounter with influential figures such as
Diane Arbus and
Lisette Model deepen his commitment to a photography grounded in emotional immediacy and human connection.
By the late 1970s,
Bruce Weber establishes a distinctive voice within fashion photography, collaborating with major houses such as Calvin Klein and Ralph Lauren. His images, often bathed in natural light and infused with a sense of nostalgia, depart from the rigid aesthetics of the era. Instead, they evoke a cinematic atmosphere where youth, beauty, and vulnerability coexist. Whether working for magazines or advertising campaigns, Weber maintains a consistent sensitivity to gesture and presence, allowing his subjects to appear both staged and spontaneous.
The exhibition also reflects Weber’s engagement with film, notably through
Let’s Get Lost, his portrait of jazz musician Chet Baker. This cross-disciplinary practice reinforces the narrative quality of his photography, where each image suggests a fragment of a larger story. His work moves fluidly between commercial and personal contexts, blurring the boundaries between assignment and expression.
Accompanying the exhibition, the publication
Bruce Weber: My Education gathers images and reflections that echo the themes presented in the gallery. Together, they form a meditation on influence, memory, and the enduring role of tenderness in shaping an artistic vision.
Image:
Bruce Weber | Kate Moss and friends, Miami, Florida, 2003 © Bruce Weber, courtesy of FaheyKlein Gallery, Los Angeles