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Vogue model and war journalist Lee Miller’s Jewish friends and lovers

A film released this week tracks her astonishing story – and the cast of high-profile Jews who played crucial roles in building her career

September 11, 2024 15:34
Copyright_LeeMillerArchives_Picasso_and_Lee_Miller_in_his_studio,_Liberation_of_Paris_Paris_France_1944-HR
Artful: Lee Miller and Pablo Picasso in his Paris studio, in 1944
4 min read

Lee Miller is back in the spotlight thanks to a biopic released today that stars Kate Winslet as the Vogue model turned war photographer.

The film Lee focuses on Miller’s action-packed life in the late 1930s and 1940s and features events from a lively picnic with Man Ray, poet Paul Éluard and other friends in Cannes in 1937, to her harrowing discoveries at Buchenwald and Dachau at the camps’ liberation, in 1945.

Lee Miller in uniform[Missing Credit]

As one of the first models to become a photographer at a time when there were few female snappers and even fewer female war ones, Miller was a pioneer. But she also shot fashion, land and streetscapes, had a library of Surrealist images and is known for works such as the women in black fire masks, the rolling Egyptian desert seen through mosquito netting and sitting in Hitler’s bathtub in his Munich home.  “Her versatilty was unusual, and her images show an understanding of humanity on very different levels,” says photographer Jillian Edelstein.

“Her photography always brings that element of surprise in many different ways,” says Hilary Floe, senior curator of modern and contemporary British art at the Tate, who is curating a Lee Miller exhibition at the Tate Britain opening next year. “Consider her early Surrealist photograph that captures a web of soft tar oozing across the pavement towards a pair of anonymous feet, it provokes a sense of unease,” she says. “The tar could be mistaken for rushing water or an encroaching creature from the deep sea.”

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Film