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New York, 1979
Helen Levitt
1979
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American photographer Helen Levitt studied and worked with Walker Evans in the late 1930s. In the 1940s, she began to photograph children in New York City, producing the black-and-white street photography for which she is best known. In 1943, Edward Steichen curated her first solo exhibition, Helen Levitt: Photographs of Children, at the Museum of Modern Art. Later in the decade, she and James Agee collaborated on two films about New York street life. In 1959–1960, two Guggenheim Foundation grants made it possible for Levitt to become one of the first street photographers to work in color. Much of this work was stolen in a burglary of her apartment, but the remaining items, along with other color photographs taken in later years, were published in Slide Show: The Color Photographs of Helen Levitt (2005).
“Well, as you know already, the story is about Esterka, the daughter of the Jew to whom this house belongs. She was ten years old when he came here, and tall of her age, with black hair and large blue…
This synagogue structure contains stunning samples of wood painting and folk motifs (including verses, images of Jerusalem, animals, and flowers). The panels were decorated by Eliezer Zusman, an…
Moledet: Yar?on li-vene ha-ne’urim by the Agudat ha-morim be-erets yisrael be-hishtatfut “Kohelet” (Jaffa, 1911). Photo credit: The Dorot Jewish Division, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations.
Detail from Private Synagogue, Unterlimpurg, Germany, Eliezer Zusman of Brody.