Bruce Wrighton
Woolworth Shopper, Binghamton, NY
1987
type-c print
Denis Darzacq + Anna Iris Lüneman
Double Mix Nº33
2015
inkjet print and earthenware
Eugène Atget
Versailles
circa 1901
vintage albumen print
Fred Herzog
Family
1967
archival pigment print
Eadweard Muybridge
Hand Drawing a Circle, plate 532
ca. 1887
collotype
Ray Metzker
Marseilles
1961
vintage silver gelatin print
Fred Herzog
Crossing Powell
1984
archival pigment print
Diane Arbus
Woman Carrying Child in Central Park
1956
silver gelatin print
Simone Rosenbauer
Wing Hing Long & Co., Tingha, NSW
2010
archival pigment print
Early 20th century camera-less cyanotype. Artists unknown.
Helen Levitt
NYC
circa 1990
Type-C print
David Graham
Marge Gapp's Studio, Philadelphia, PA
1979
Type-C print
Fred Herzog
U R Next
1959
archival pigment print
Toshio Shibata
Takane Village, Gifu Prefecture
2003
type-c print
Jessica Lim
Joshua Tree and Contrail
2016
archival pigment print
Jessica Lim
Yosemite Moss
2016
archival pigment print
Simone Rosenbauer
Like Ice in the Sunshine Nº6
2014
Archival Pigment Print
Paul Narkiewicz
Italian Landscape
1977
watercolor
Paul Narkiewicz
Italian Landscape
1975
watercolor
Daniel Ranalli
Photogram Nº13
1978
photogram
Toshio Shibata
Tsuyama City, Okayama Prefecture
2014
type-c contact print
Yasuhiro Ishimoto
silver gelatin print
Ray Metzker
Whispy
1974
Unique composite of 12 mounted gelatin silver prints
Barbara Kasten
Construct III-A
1980
Polaroid
10x8"
Daniel Ranalli
1975
photogram
Will Brown
Pretzel Window
1973
gelatin silver print
Eija Ina
Emperor go-Kameyama
2003
silver gelatin print
Peter Sekaer
circa 1930
vintage silver gelatin print
Thomas Porett
Chicago, 1960
silver gelatin print
Burk Uzzle
Woodstock, 1969
vinage silver gelatin print
Burk Uzzle
Ercolines, Woodstock, 1969
carbon print
David Graham
Point Pleasant, NJ
1993
vintage Type-C print
Brian Lang
2016
oil pastel on business envelope
Joe Jachna
1959
silver gelatin print
Mikhail Gubin
A Bored Guy in the Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona
2015
archival pigment print
Featuring small works by:
Diane Arbus
Eugène Atget
Will Brown
Denis Darzacq + Anna Luneman
Fred Herzog
David Graham
Mikhail Gubin
Eiji Ina
Yasuhiro Ishimoto
Joe Jachna
Brian Lang
Jessica Lim
Helen Levitt
Ray K. Metzker
Eadweard Muybridge
Paul Narkiewicz
Thomas Porett
Daniel Ranalli
Chris Rauschenberg
Simone Rosenbauer
Toshio Shibata
Aaron Siskand
Joe Sterling
Kazuo Sumida
Burk Uzzle
Bruce Wrighton
The Museum of Modern Art has reinstalled its fourth-floor collection galleries with works exclusively from the 1960s. Interweaving works from all of MoMA’s curatorial departments the galleries proceed chronologically, with work installed by year. Among the works featured from 1966 is Ray Metzker's photographic composite Trolley Stop. Other featured artists include Richard Tuttle, Agnes Martin, Sigmar Polke, Vija Celmins, and Joseph Beuys.
Hyperallergic's Elyssa Goodman offers a delightfully reflective take on Simone's work in her piece Training Your Eyes to See More
Arthur Lubow reveiws the 2016 AIPAD Photography Show for The New York Times
In a new series gallery artist Denis Darzacq has collaborated with dancers from the Paris Opera on the streets of Paris.
Denis Darzacq and Anna Lüneman's work paired with original poetry for Hyperallergic
Helen Levitt's seminal NYC documentary film In the Street was screened as part of the survey show America Is Hard to See, the Whitney Museum of Art's inaugural exhibition in their newly opened Meatpacking District location.
Times writer Jonathan Blaustein talks to David Graham on his 30+ year photography career with an accompanying slide show featuring 17 of David's most classic pictures.
The Japanese photographer Toshio Shibata is fascinated by water — in particular, the way it interacts with man-made structures. For the later half of his almost-40-year career in photography, he has explored this relationship in novel ways, hiding horizon lines and taking the perspective of the water itself with his camera, visually evoking its rushing sound.
Ray K. Metzker, a modernist photographer who called himself “an intellectual wanderer” and proved it over six decades of audacious experiment — he sometimes overlapped exposures to make a single picture from a roll of film — died in Philadelphia at age 83.
Vince Aletti reviews Small Things Considered
Jonathan Balustein talks to Will Brown about his photograps depicting Philadelphia in the 1970s. The interview is accompanied by a 15 picture slide show.