Lawrence Schiller: Motion Pictures presents a career built between the photojournalistic frame and the movie set. On view from June 5 to June 23 at Hilton Contemporary in Chicago, the exhibition gathers images that move from Hollywood backlots to major news events, showing why Schiller has long stood out as both a witness and a storyteller.
Schiller, who turns 90 this December, built his reputation on access and timing. His photographs of Marilyn Monroe, Robert Redford, Paul Newman, Muhammad Ali and other cultural figures often feel less posed than observed in motion, with the tension of something just about to happen. That quality runs through the show, including behind-the-scenes work from Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, where he not only photographed the production but also directed several minutes of the film.
The exhibition also reaches beyond cinema. Schiller’s career in magazines such as Life, Look, Time and Paris Match placed him at the center of major events in American history, including the aftermath of Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination and the final days of Lee Harvey Oswald. His reporting later expanded into books, documentaries and film projects, confirming a career that moved easily across media without losing its documentary edge.
Among the most notable images in
Motion Pictures are Schiller’s photographs of Marilyn Monroe made between 1960 and 1962, including some of the last taken on the set of Something’s Got to Give. Those pictures, shown in a year tied to Monroe’s 100th birthday, add another layer of public memory to the exhibition. They also reflect what Schiller does best: turning famous figures into subjects shaped by atmosphere, fatigue, performance and private pause.
At Hilton Contemporary, the work sits comfortably between still photography and film history. Schiller’s pictures do not simply record celebrity and spectacle; they carry the sense of a scene unfolding just beyond the edge of the frame.
Image:
Marilyn Celebrating Her 36th Birthday, 1962 © Lawrence Schiller