Artwork above by Retna for Arrested Motion

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Berenice Abbott in online gallery of "Changing New York"











DOG STAR enjoys early photography and our recent hunt for Berenice Abbott online was both helpful and productive.


We found an online gallery that is simple and manageable to have a first look at Berenice, her life and her major photo project called "Changing New York."


In 1929, after eight years in Europe, photographer Berenice Abbott (1898–1991) returned to New York City for what was planned as a short visit.


During her absence, hundreds of 19th-century buildings had been razed to make way for dozens of skyscrapers. The unprecedented building boom inspired Abbott to give up her thriving Parisian portrait practice to photograph the new face of New York.


Soon after her return, the Stock Market crashed and the Depression began. For five years, Abbott struggled to pursue her project, reserving Wednesdays to photograph New York City.


In 1935, the Federal Art Project offered her support: it gave her a $145 monthly salary, a field assistant, research assistants, a secretary, and a car.


By 1940, Abbott had completed “Changing New York,” one of the monumental achievements of 20th-century photography.


When the Federal Art Project budget was cut in 1939, Abbott lost her job.  She completed her project by creating two sets of 305 exhibition prints for her sponsor, the Museum of the City of New York, and a partial set for the New York State Museum.


We chose FOUR photos above to show scenes in New York City that ARE LOST FOREVER:
Top to bottom:
1.  Department of Docks building at Battery Park - when the shipping business ran from the Battery all the way up the west side of Manhattan on the Hudson River
2.  Charles Lane in the West Village of Manhattan now crowded over by glass apartment towers
3.  Greyhound Bus Station on 8th Avenue between 33rd & 34th Streets
4.  Pier 21 - beneath the Brooklyn Bridge just north of today's South Street Seaport






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