THE LOWER EAST SIDE:SELECTIONS FROM THE ICP COLLECTION


This post is also available in: French

In many ways, the Lower East Side is both quintessentially American and uniquely New York. Always changing, it has been one of the most densely populated, multiethnic, and modern places in the country. While late nineteenth-century social reformers attempted to show middle- and upper-class New Yorkers ”how the other half lives,” later photographers had a different, and often more personal, relationship with the neighborhood. In fact, many of the social documentarians and street photographers of the 1930s and 1940s were first-generation Americans born on the Lower East Side, who created sensitive and nuanced portraits of their neighbors and shared environment. This exhibition, which primarily draws from ICP’s rich holdings of mid-twentieth-century works, examines the role images play in creating narratives about this first port of entry for generations of immigrants. As a newcomer to the neighborhood, ICP is committed to engaging with the many visual histories of the dynamic place that has been seen as ripe for reform and reinvention for more than a hundred years.

photographs by Jacob RIIS, Ilse BING, Lisette MODEL, Lee SIEVAN, WEEGEE, Dan WEINER

From 25/01/2020 to 18/05/2020
THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY
79 Essex Street
10002 NEW YORK
United States

Opening hours : Every day except Tuesday from 11am to 7pm, Thursday from 11am to 9pm.
Phone : 917 974 0022
press@icp.org
www.icp.org