Helen Levitt

Helen Levitt

Helen Levitt

Helen Levitt

Hardcover

$60.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Temporarily Out of Stock Online
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

"If ever anyone was born to be a photographer, Helen Levitt was. Looking at these pictures triggers that tingling feeling you get from photographs by artists like Lartigue, Kertesz, and Cartier-Bresson: a feeling that the camera is less an expertly operated tool than the seamless extension of a mind and body that are preternaturally alert to the world."
-The New York Times

"Levitt's photographs, like her city, though occasionally they rise to beauty, are mostly too quick for it. Instead, they have the quality of frozen street-corner conversation: she went out, saw something wonderful, came home to tell you all about it, and then, frustrated, said, 'You had to be there,' and you realize, looking at the picture, that you were."
-Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker

Helen Levitt, the visual poet laureate of New York City, published her magnum opus Crosstown in 2001 to great acclaim. The book immediately sold out, never to be reprinted, making it a classic volume of street photography for the cognoscenti. Levitt went on to author two smaller volumes, Here and There and Slide Show, her first monograph exclusively featuring her little-known color work, which have garnered her accolades from around the globe. Most recently, she was named the 2008 recipient of the SPECTRUM International Prize for Photography of the Foundation of Lower Saxony, an honor previously bestowed on such luminaries as Robert Adams and Sophie Calle. Her final book: Helen Levitt, was released in conjunction with a retrospective exhibition at Germany's Sprengel Museum Hannover, the exhibit included her most iconic works, intermixed with never-before-seen color work. Combining seven decades of New York City street life with her seminal work in Mexico City, Helen Levitt's self-titled compilation features the master works of an incomparable career.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781576874295
Publisher: powerHouse Books
Publication date: 04/01/2008
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 12.20(w) x 12.70(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Born in Brooklyn in 1913, Helen Levitt's photographs made on the streets of New York have inspired and amazed generations of photographers, collectors and curators. Helen Levitt's first major museum exhibition was at the Museum of Modern Art in 1943, and a second solo show was held there in 1974. Retrospectives of her work have been held at several museums including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, International Center for Photography and the Centre National la Photographie in Paris.

Read an Excerpt

Helen Levitt’s photographs are easy to read, but difficult to fathom. Taking shape at the end of the 1930s, a decade of economic crisis, and surrounded in New York by the buzz of every kind of celluloid media, they reveal to us something profound about the world – with little comment. A Levitt photograph does not so much narrate as emanate. It communicates the lived experience of the streets rather than urban life filtered by social or political concerns. Counter to the tenor of the times, the radical desire that compelled Levitt to release the camera shutter was other than “documentary.” Her images are intensely legible and tend – as the photographer herself was wont to do – to fend off any analysis. However, in what follows I want to subvert this playful trap and offer five pointers to reading Levitt’s photography. Each point should be considered in conjunction with the many illustrations in this catalog and I would advise more time spent looking than reading. Understanding Levitt’s practice is as much about seeing and feeling as thinking and analyzing, although (contra Levitt) analysis is vital. Think, feel, see … Feel, see, think … This is to begin to catch the subversive rhythm of a Levitt photograph. – from the essay by Duncan Forbes

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews