Helen Levitt

Helen Levitt New York - MoMA One on One Series

Paperback (11 Feb 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Helen Levitt's photographs from the 1930s and 1940s of the communities of New York City's Harlem are startling achievements of street photography. They catch the evanescent configurations of gesture, movement, pose and expression that make visible the street as surreal theatre, and everyday life as art and mystery. The unguarded life of children at play became, understandably, Levitt's particular preoccupation.

Levitt resisted political readings of her work, and distanced herself from the progressive impulses of social documentary photography. But class, race and gender are everywhere at work in Levitt's images. The diffidence and deceptive artless of the images also hide her devotion to both popular and avant-garde cinema, attention to the work of other photographers, frequenting of New York's museums and galleries. Shamoon Zamir examines the different registers and contexts of Levitt's work through a reading of "New York, 1939", one of Levitt's iconic images.

Book information

ISBN: 9781633451209
Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Imprint: The Museum of Modern Art
Pub date:
DEWEY: 770
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 47
Weight: 204g
Height: 186mm
Width: 231mm
Spine width: 8mm