Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Abbott would have approved, January 10, 2005
I highly recommend this book to anyone who has even a passing interest either in New York or photography-or both. It reveals much about New York in recent years, about Douglas Levere's fanatical and skillful photographic obsession; and it reminds us of Abbott's remarkable accomplishment during the 1930s.
In a CNN interview, Levere described his re-photography project modestly as a snapshot of New York at the end of the last century that we can compare to Abbott's snapshot of New York in the 1930s. Through such a comparison, he said, we can learn "what we've done to this place we call New York." While this is true, his use of the term "snapshot" suggests a kind of intuitive casualness, which is far from the truth, at least in terms of Levere's own photographs. Although Abbott's views of New York were sometimes taken intuitively and occasionally even randomly, Levere's photographs are anything but. One immediately senses and appreciates his faithful replication of every shadow, every angle, every framing, and every bit of lens distortion in Abbott's original photographs. His scrupulous attention to the details in her work is especially remarkable because Abbott's techniques did not make his task easy. She created vexing puzzles not only by tampering with some of her lenses (to double their magnification, according to the book's introduction), but also by taking some of her Financial District photographs blindly over the edge of tall buildings because of her fear of heights.
It is striking that Levere's project is so different from Abbott's in process, but similar to a certain extent in effect. Abbott's project was primarily a sociological study imbedded within modernist aesthetic practices. She sought to create a broadly inclusive collection of photographs that together suggest a vital interaction between three aspects of urban life: the diverse people of the city; the places they live, work and play; and their daily activities. It was intended to empower people by making them realize that their environment was a consequence of their collective behavior (and visa versa). Moreover, she avoided the merely pretty in favor of what she described as "fantastic" contrasts between the old and the new, and chose her camera angles and lenses to create compositions that either stabilized a subject (if she approved of it), or destabilized it (if she scorned it). Levere, on the other hand, started with Abbott's camera location, camera angle, lens, time of day and time of year, and recorded what appeared within his camera's viewer. Clearly Levere's images seem unlike Abbott's in intent. Yet because of the broad range of new and old subjects that he has recorded, when juxtaposed with the even older subjects in Abbott's images, his project, too, creates a similar fantastic impact.
Moreover, despite the near-randomness of Levere's subjects, one imagines that Abbott would be pleased that his photographs are able to tell us much about the culture of late twentieth-century New York. By comparing his work to hers, we are repeatedly reminded that New York is, like all vital cities, an ever-changing manifestation of the people who live there: their enterprise, love and fashions as well as their dereliction and spite. Such an interpretation is reinforced by Bonnie Yochelson's richly insightful captions. But Levere's project will be even more significant than that for future historians. Because his project began in 1997 and ended in 2002, it also offers us one of the best (though unintended-and perhaps for this very reason twice-as-compelling and ten times as chilling) records of New York in the months leading up to, and immediately following, September 11, 2001, when the entire world was reminded that New York is a manifestation, too, of people who do not live there at all.
|
|
|
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating for anyone who likes NYC, photography or history, November 1, 2004
I am planning on getting this book for friends for the holidays - both those who live in NYC and those who just love it. The comparison between NYC in the 30s and now is compelling - what is new, what is missing and what remains. There were buildings that were boarded up for the depression that are utilized now. The pictures are beautiful and Mr. Levere did a great job making parallel pictures that capture the same feeling about New York that Ms. Abbott did so long ago.
|
|
|
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A beautiful window into the past and present of NYC, February 24, 2005
By painstakingly retracing the steps of legendary New York photographer Berenice Abbott, Douglas Levere delivers a book that is nothing less than a time machine in hardcover.
Duplicating the smallest detail -- the time of day, season, angle of the sun -- from Abbott's 1930s photographs of New York City, Levere erases every difference between Abbott's images and his own. Except time.
And with time is the only variable, the readers of these protographic pairs can focus on the information they offer.
Abbott's Italian babershop is a Chinese convenience store now. The beautiful arches of the New York Produce Exchange replaced by the crass modernism of the MTA headquarters. The working dock under the Queensboro Bridge replaced by a dainty fenced promenade.
The quality and depth of the photographs invite viewers to lean in, and lose themselves, in a New York City that once was, and the implacable grinding wheel of progress that makes way for the new. Yet sometimes the wonder is how little changes at all, as in the view of a Manhattan Bridge tower.
Lovers of New York City, and of thought-provoking photography that exults engagement over detatchment, will lose themselves in this book.
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|