
Identical Twins, Roselle, N.J.
<p>Two years before she received her first camera, Diane Arbus wrote: “There are and have been and will be an infinite number of things on Earth. Individuals all different, all wanting different things, all knowing different things, all loving different things, all looking different. . . . That is what I love: the differentness.” Arbus’s appreciation for the unusual, eccentric, and extraordinary led her to photograph a range of subjects over the thirty years of her career—transvestites, giants, art philanthropists, nudists, and, as here, identical twins. No one knows how Arbus learned about a small-town Christmas party in 1967 being held for local twins and triplets, but it is in keeping with her interest in how people are who they are. Isolating these seven-year-old girls against the wall of the Knights of Columbus hall in Roselle, New Jersey, and photographing them in her typically straightforward manner, Arbus ensured close attention would be paid to the details: the matching homemade dresses (which were green but appear black), the lace stockings bunched below the knees, and the barely discernible difference in each girl’s presentation before the camera. Such details variously belie and reinforce the uncanny suggestion of two thoroughly identical individuals.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1966
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- Image: 38 × 37 cm (15 × 14 5/8 in.); Paper: 50.5 × 40.4 cm (19 15/16 × 15 15/16 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Diane Arbus
Artist

Photography
Diane Arbus was an American photographer. She photographed a wide range of subjects including strippers, carnival performers, nudists, people with dwarfism, children, mothers, couples, elderly people, and middle-class families. She photographed her subjects in familiar settings: their homes, on the street, in the workplace, in the park. "She is noted for expanding notions of acceptable subject matter and violates canons of the appropriate distance between photographer and subject. By befriending, not objectifying her subjects, she was able to capture in her work a rare psychological intensity."
Full artist profile →More
More by Diane Arbus
A Family On Their Lawn One Sunday in Westchester, New York
1968 · Gelatin silver print
Two Ladies at the Automat (New York City)
1966 · Gelatin silver print
A Family One Evening In A Nudist Camp, Pennsylvania
1965 · Gelatin silver print
A husband and wife in the woods at a nudist camp, N.J.
1963 · Gelatin silver print
The human pincushion, Ronald C. Harrison, N.J. 1962
1962 · Gelatin silver print
Bareheaded William Mack in a fur coat by a banister
1961 · Gelatin silver print
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Diane Arbus
- Year
- 1966
- Medium
- Gelatin silver print
- Dimensions
- Image: 38 × 37 cm (15 × 14 5/8 in.); Paper: 50.5 × 40.4 cm (19 15/16 × 15 15/16 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1966-128170
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





