Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

Exhibition Celebrates the History of the New York Public Library’s Photography Collection

October 1, 2010 by All Art News  
Filed under Photography

NEW YORK, NY.- The New York Public Library’s Photography Collection is celebrated with Recollection: Thirty Years of Photography at The New York Public Library, a multi-media exhibition featuring the work of over 90 prominent photographers, including Diane Arbus, Richard Avedon, Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, André Kertész, Duane Michals, August Sander, Cindy Sherman, and Willam Wegman.

Opened yesterday, Recollection shares work from the Library’s Photography Collection in a physical exhibition in the Print Gallery & Stokes Gallery at the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building (42nd Street at 5th Avenue in Manhattan); through an online exhibition at http://exhibitions.nypl.org/recollection; and via short and long-form music videos viewed at the Library and online.

Helen Levitt. New York 1972. Dye transfer print 1972 580x388 Exhibition Celebrates the History of the New York Public Librarys Photography Collection
Helen Levitt. “New York 1972.” Dye transfer print, 1972. NYPL, Wallach Division, Photography Collection. © Estate of Helen Levitt; courtesy of Laurence Miller Gallery, New York

“This exhibition is not only an attempt to show another, perhaps less well-known side of the Photography Collection, it’s meant also as an homage to the first ‘recollection’ of photographs at NYPL thirty years ago,” says Stephen Pinson, exhibition curator, Assistant Director for Arts, Prints, and Photographs and Robert B. Menschel Curator of the Photography Collection. “I have gathered together these photographs under the broad category of portraiture in order to celebrate their diverse origins as well as their shared destiny, a destiny that I think Cartier-Bresson had in mind when he described portraits as ‘visual reverberations.’ Photographs make us remember, they remind us and recall things, but they also recall one another.”

Recollection is not a survey exhibition of photographic history and processes but rather a carefully curated work loosely based on the genre of “portraiture”. People and human nature are the subjects of the work featured in Recollection. The earliest work, for example, is Zaida Ben-Yusuf’s “Grover Cleveland” from 1901; the latest portraits, by Stephen Dupont and Robin Bowman, are both from 2004. Dorothea Lange documents “Woman of the High Plains” (1938); Amy Arbus photographed “Ann Magnuson on Park Avenue” (1981); Penny Diane Wolin’s “That’s His Mother, He Never Married” (1985) is also included. Famous and anonymous faces mingle in the exhibition; happiness, regret, and melancholy interact. The exhibition sequencing links the diverse works in an emotionally intelligent way.

The online exhibition of Recollection displays the images in their curatorial entirety but also allows the viewer to search by photographer and theme and to discover how each image made its way to the Library’s collection (donation, purchase, etc.).

A three-minute video showing each work will be shown in Astor Hall of the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building. A shorter version of this video will be available for online viewing at the exhibition website at http://exhibitions.nypl.org/recollection. Both videos are accompanied by the song “Soak It Up” from Houses, a “Chicago-based bliss pop outfit” (noted by music blog Pitchfork). Houses’ debut album All Night comes out October 19 on Lefse Records; Houses can be found at www.facebook.com/sunhaus. Olgivy & Mather New York and Go Robot Editorial produced the videos. A free download of Houses’ “Soak It Up” is also available from the exhibition’s website.

Photography at NYPL traces its origins back to the opening of the Astor Library in 1849, a decade after Louis Daguerre announced the first commercially viable photographic process to the world. Photographs have been part of the Library ever since, whether collected as supporting reference matter for various divisions or as original source material based on depicted subjects. “Photography” as a distinct research category and collecting division, however, was not formally recognized until thirty years ago, at a time when photography as its own artistic medium was gaining recognition in the larger art world. The Collection today comprises 500,000 photographs by 6,000 photographers.

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