FAMILY VALUES
KURT, COURTNEY, & FRANCES BEAN
In an era obsessed with Family Values, Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love were well known for their struggles with addiction and parenthood. To reframe their notoriety, Kurt and Courtney consented to a rare photoshoot for Spin magazine with their newborn, Frances Bean. Only five images were originally published in Spin; the entirety of the photoshoot is seen in this book for the first time ever.
Family Values is a photography book presenting approximately 90 images featuring Kurt, Courtney, and their baby Frances taken one morning in their modest Hollywood home. These photos are selected from a 1992 photoshoot that award-winning husband-and-wife image-making duo Guzman did for Spin amidst toys and pajamas, the sweetness, humor, irony and the simple happiness of a new mom and dad at home with their baby girl.
In addition to the never-before-seen photographs, Family Values includes two personal essays. The first is written by Michael Azerrad, American author, music journalist, and musician who was close friends with Kurt Cobain and wrote the 1993 definitive biography on Nirvana titled Come As You Are: The Story of Nirvana. The second essay is written by Guzman, the photography duo who shot the iconic Spin shoot pictured in the book’s pages. Below are experts taken from the two essays.
Michael Azerrad:”Guzman arrived at the house that sunny autumn-in-LA morning with their cameras and lights and an assistant; Courtney answered the door and graciously offered them Dunkin’ Donuts coffee and some guava pies…
Guzman: “Courtney greeted us at the front door and offered us coffee and a piece of ‘just delivered’ guava pie. She was super friendly, and while showing us around the house, shared that now-famous story about how she had recently bought a brand-new Lexus but Kurt, who couldn’t imagine himself driving around in such a fancy car, made her return it the next day. Her husband, she said, was upstairs but would be down soon…
Michael Azerrad: Although the concept of“family values” was not yet attached to the Spin piece—that would come later that same day—Guzman’s plan was to have Kurt mow the lawn, and maybe Courtney would do something domestic, like ironing, to spoof the outdated mores both musicians outspokenly refuted. But as soon as Guzman walked in the door, they immediately realized that nothing of the sort was going to happen…
Guzman: We began to set up our lighting equipment in the living room. A hair and makeup team arrived and they went off into another room with Courtney. Not long after, we asked the hair and makeup team to leave because they were dragging our heads with negative banter plucked from the headlines. Courtney rolled with it and said she could do her own hair anyway. That was clearly just a small taste of the distress that Kurt and Courtney were being subjected to…
Michael Azerrad: For one thing, Kurt was still in bed. Guzman just rolled with it: fine, they said, we’ll just photograph him there. So they trooped upstairs and photographed Kurt in bed, holding Frances, later joined by Courtney, and one of those family shots made the Spin cover…
Guzman: At some point, since Kurt hadn’t appeared, we asked Courtney if we could just go up and grab some pictures of him in bed. We weren’t sure if Kurt had been informed of this, but she gave us the green light anyway, and we all headed upstairs. For most people, meeting someone for the first time while sitting in bed would be a little awkward, but Kurt seemed unfazed by the two strangers standing in his bedroom…
Michael Azerrad: There are many good ways to be a family. In 1992, that was a difficult thing for some people to get their head around, and it still is. But, as these very moving photographs demonstrate, there is only one true family value, and that is love.”
Guzman: Slowly, a narrative of two transcendent artists beside their most tender creation began to unfold upon the studio wall—and those are the images that appear in this book.”