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Toronto, Ontario, Canada
"To take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. It's a way of life." ~ Henri Cartier-Bresson
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts

Friday, October 6, 2023

Photographer Profile ~ Matt Weber

Who knows New York City better than a NYC cabbie? No one. They have seen literally everything -  from the seedy underbelly of this real life Gotham to the glam and glitz of the capital of the world.

The ubiquitous cabs in New York become virtually invisible to the citizens as they go about their daily lives. This fly on the wall existence affords one, with  the right proclivities and skill,  the opportunity to record some remarkably candid moments. 

Former cabbie Matt Weber became a street photographer after seeing some pretty crazy stuff and began to document the pulse and rhythm of the city like no other New York shooter.

"It had nothing to do with wanting to be a street photographer. I was driving a taxi and I saw so many crazy things on the street that I kept saying, “Damn, I’ve got to buy a camera.” Driving a taxicab in 1978 on the night shift at four in the morning in mid- town, if you saw the movie Taxi Driver, that was the world that was out there. There were prostitutes on the corner, Times Square was crazy; it was a dangerous part of town. I was robbed in my taxicab at double gunpoint." ~  Matt Weber



Very few taxi drivers went up to Harlem. I chose to go up to Harlem because I couldn’t disrespect someone and not take them there unless they looked like they’d rob me. I saw some crazy things: knife fights, people having sex on the streets, and all of a sudden I was like, wow, I better get a camera. Then, once I got one, I was constantly looking around and people were like, “This taxi driver can’t keep his eyes on the road!”  ~ Matt Weber



  







 



 
 


























 



 































Friday, December 11, 2015

Photographer Camilo José Vergara's New York in the 70's

Chilean-born Camilo José Vergara began photographing American ghettos when he was a Notre Dame undergraduate; he continued while earning a master's degree in sociology at Columbia University. He is best known for his photographs of New York City; his imagery captured the soul and essence of life in the Bronx circa 1970.

His works have been widely exhibited, most recently in the New York Historical Society (Martin Luther King Jr.: The Dream Continues, 2013), the Museum of the City of New York (Tiny Towers: 1970–2011, 2011–12), and the National Building Museum, Washington D. C. (Detroit Is not Dry Bones), 2012; How the Other Half Worships, 2009). Amongst his publications are Harlem: The Unmaking of a Ghetto (forthcoming, 2013), How the Other Half Worships, 2005, The New American Ghetto (1995), and Twin Towers Remembered (2001).

In 2002 Vergara was awarded a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant and he was awarded the National Humanities Medal by President Obama in 2013.




"East 167th Street, South Bronx." 1973
 "Bronx River, Bronx." 1970





 "Girls with Barbies, East Harlem." 1970
 "Fifth Ave at 110th Street, East Harlem." 1970


"Hoe Avenue at 172nd Street, Bronx." 1970





Teenagers in the Melrose Section, South Bronx, 1970
 "Puerto Rican wedding, East Harlem." 1970



"Cadillac Fleetwood, Harlem." 1970

                
"View of the World Trade Center under construction from Duane Street." 1970