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Exhibition: ‘Portraits of New York: Photographs from the MoMA’ at La Casa Encendida, Madrid

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Exhibition dates: 27th March – 14th June, 2009

 

I have collected a few photographs that appear in the exhibition.

“Photographs from the MoMA, which will provide an in-depth look at an essential component of the MoMA’s assets: its photography collection. Curated by Sarah Hermanson Meister, associate curator of the museum’s department of photography, the exhibition offers an overview of the history of photography through the work of over 90 artists, with the iconic city as a backdrop. It includes some of the most prestigious names in photography, such as Berenice Abbott, Diane Arbus, Harry Callahan, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walter Evans, Lee Friedlander, Helen Levitt, Cindy Sherman, Irving Penn and Alfred Stieglitz.

 

Paul Strand. 'Wall Street' 1915

 

Paul Strand
‘Wall Street’
1915

 

Ted Croner. 'Central Park South' 1947-48

 

Ted Croner
‘Central Park South’
1947-48

 

For Sarah Hermanson Meister, associate curator of the MoMA’s Department of Photography, “Portraits of New York amply reflects the history of synergies of this medium and of the Big Apple during a period of important transformations for both. The photographs generated by the restless and constant commitment of numerous photographers to the city of New York have played a fundamental role in determining how New Yorkers perceive the city and themselves. These photographs have also defined the city’s image in the world’s imagination.

[…] The urban landscape of the city is a combination of the old and the new in constant evolution, and these physical transformations are repeated in the demographic changes that have characterised the city since the 1880s, when massive waves of immigrants began to arrive. This same diversity can be seen in the photography of New York of the past four decades. Just as its architects are inspired and limited by surrounding structures and building codes, and just as its inhabitants learn and rub up against each other and previous generations, so too the photographers of New York transport the visual memory of a an extensive and extraordinary repertoire of images of the city. They take on the challenge of creating new works that go beyond traditions and respond to what is new in New York.

 

Bernice Abbott. 'Nightview, New York City' 1932

 

Bernice Abbott
‘Nightview, New York City’
1932

 

The exhibition curator continues: “Throughout the 20th century, numerous artists have felt inspired by New York’s combination of glamour and rawness. The city – which acquired its modernity at the same pace as photography, and in an equally impetuous and undisciplined way – has always been a theme of particular vitality for photographers, both those who have visited the city and those who live in it. On one occasion, faced with the challenge of capturing the essence of New York with a camera, the photographer Berenice Abbott wondered, “How shall the two-dimensional print in black and white suggest the flux of activity of the metropolis, the interaction of human beings and solid architectural constructions, all impinging upon each other in time?” Each of the photographs reproduced here is a unique response to that question.

 

Arthur (Weegee) Fellig. 'Coney Island' 1940

 

Arthur (Weegee) Fellig
‘Coney Island’
1940

 

Diane Arbus. 'Woman with Veil on Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C' 1968

 

Diane Arbus
‘Woman with Veil on Fifth Avenue, N.Y.C’
1968

 

New York may not be the capital of the United States, but it prides itself on being the capital of the world. Its inhabitants are intimate strangers, its avenues are constantly teeming and its buildings are absolutely unmistakeable, though they are packed so close together that it is impossible to see just one. The New York subway runs twenty-four hours a day, which has earned it the sobriquet of “the city that never sleeps.” It is the model for Gotham City, the disturbing metropolis that Batman calls home, and a symbol of independence and a wellspring of opportunities in a wide variety of films, from Breakfast at Tiffany’s to Working Girl. And this is just a sample of the captivating and abundant raw material that the city offers to artists, regardless of the medium in which they work. However, it is the convergence of photographers in this city – in this place that combines anonymity and community, with its local flavour and global ambitions – that has created the ideal setting for the development of modern photography.”

Text from the La Casa Encendida website

 

Bruce Davidson. 'Untitled' from the 'Brooklyn Band' series 1959

 

Bruce Davidson
‘Untitled’ from the ‘Brooklyn Band’ series
1959

 

Cindy Sherman. 'Untitled Film Still #21' 1978

 

Cindy Sherman
‘Untitled Film Still #21′
1978

 

 

La Casa Encendida

Ronda Valencia, 2 28012 Madrid
La Casa Encendida is open from Monday to Sunday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day of the year except national and Community of Madrid holidays.

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Posted in American, american photographers, black and white photography, Cindy Sherman, Diane Arbus, documentary photography, exhibition, gallery website, New York, photography, street photography Tagged: Arthur Fellig, Bernice Abbott Nightview New York City 1932, Bruce Davidson, Cindy Sherman, Diane Arbus Woman with Veil on Fifth Avenue 1968, exhibition, La Casa Encendida, madrid, New York, Paul Strand Wall Street 1915, Portraits of New York: Photographs from the MoMA, Ted Croner Central Park South 1947, the metropolitan museum of modern art, Weegee Coney Island 1940

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