News

Mesmerizing Street Photography Chronicles Postwar NYC’s Vibrant Citizens and Iconic Signage, 1945-1960

29 June 2023adminMesmerizing Street Photography Chronicles Postwar NYC’s Vibrant Citizens and Iconic Signage, 1945-1960In 1945, Todd Webb was discharged from the U.S. Navy following World War II, and landed in New York.

With a keen fascination for the bustling humanity of Manhattan, he took his large-format camera out to the streets, capturing its people and places in all weather and seasons.

Buildings, signage, vehicles, the passing throngs, isolated figures, curious eccentrics, odd corners, windows, doorways, alleyways, squares, avenues, storefronts, uptown, and downtown, from the Brooklyn Bridge to Harlem, his pictures document a rich portrait of the everyday life and architecture of New York.

From Empire State Building, looking southeast. 1946.

What set these photos apart was their “straightforward, descriptive clarity” even though they were often of familiar views.

One large 10-foot–long panorama photograph which was critically acclaimed showed a section of Sixth Avenue from 43rd–44th streets which, in 1991, was seen as a “visual time capsule of the city” and was described as a “stunner.”

Webb’s photos reflected the photographer’s sense of discovery and captured the times, such as photos of hand-painted banners over apartment house doors saying “Welcome Home, G.I.s”.

In one photograph, Webb went to the top of the RCA Building and shot south using a backlit technique, which captured the Empire State Building at night.

The best photographs, according to New York Times art critic Charles Hagen, contained the “simple geometries of urban architecture” in a “simple elegance”; Hagen thought Webb’s New York City photographs were his best.

In 1946, he had his first solo exhibition of his photographs at the Museum of the City of New York.

125th Street. 1946.

Webb fell in love with photography in 1940, after taking a master class with renowned nature photographer Ansel Adams.

But while Adams was known for his stately pictures of the United States’ National Parks, Webb was more drawn to urban cityscapes and the people who brought them to life.

In 1947, Webb was hired by Fortune magazine and he worked with professional photographers funded by the Standard Oil Company led by Roy Stryker the group included notable photographers such as Sol Libsohn.

According to the New York Times, the team of professional photographers was “given amazingly free rein by its corporate sponsor” to produce a documentary about oil.

125th Street, Harlem. 1946.

Webb traveled to Paris in 1949 and married fellow American Lucille Minqueau. In Paris, Webb produced a “vivid record” of the city which earned him recognition.

Then, Webbs moved back to New York City to live in Greenwich Village in 1952. In 1955, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to photographically record pioneer trails of early settlers of the western United States.

He was hired in 1957 by the United Nations to photograph its General Assembly. He won a contract to photograph Sub–Saharan Africa in 1958.

The Webbs lived in the Provence region of France, around 1970, and he continued to photograph regularly, and later lived, for a period, in Bath, England.

The Webbs finally settled in the state of Maine, living in the city of Portland, based on the suggestion of a friend. In 1978, Webb won a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and continued to live and work in Maine. Webb died in 2000 in Lewiston, Maine.

3rd Avenue El looking south from Fulton Street Station. 1948.

In 2017, the Todd Webb Archive refurbished its website with biographical data, collection information, and a column regarding news events.

In April 2017, an exhibition titled “A City Seen” opened at the Museum of the City of New York. Curated by Sean Corcoran, the exhibit was a comprehensive survey of Webb’s work in New York during the 1940s.

In conjunction with the show, the book I See a City: Todd Webb’s New York, Thames & Hudson, 2017.

East 7th Street. 1946.

Fulton Fish Market wharf. 1946.

Watching Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. 1946.

Tenements and Graveyard from Chatham Square El Station. 1946.

125th Street, Harlem. Whisk broom salesman. 1946.

The Battery. 1945.

Near Fulton Fish Market. 1946.

3rd Avenue from 42nd Street El Station. 1945.

Maise, Queen of the Bowery. 1946.

125th Street and Broadway, Harlem. 1946.

104th Street. 1946.

Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets (1/4). 1948.

Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets (2/4). 1948.

Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets (3/4). 1948.

Sixth Avenue between 43rd and 44th Streets (4/4). 1948.

Suffolk and Hester Streets. 1946.

Third Avenue and Bowery. 1946.

Times Square sign painter. 1946.

Greenwich Village. 1946.

Mott Street. 1948.

Third Avenue. 1946.

Orchard Street. 1946.

Amsterdam Avenue near 125th Street. 1946.

New York Stock Exchange from Old Treasury Building. 1959.

37th Street. 1946.

Sixth Avenue. 1946.

(Photo credit: Todd Webb / Museum of the City of New York / Wikimedia Commons).

Related Posts

Alarming reason hurricanes are getting stronger and the states most at risk

An alarming new study obtained by the DailyMail.com outlines why deadly hurricanes in the US are set to become even stronger – with southern states including Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida most at risk. Extreme weather conditions and stronger than usual storms have battered the South over the past six months, with Hurricanes Milton, Helene and Rafael causing devastating damage and leaving hundreds dead. Now, a new study published by Princeton University’s Climate Central has revealed that ‘bath’-temperature water in the Atlantic and Gulf is to blame for the so-called super hurricanes.

Top Democrat slams Pete Hegseth’s military record as Trump’s Defense Secretary nominee comes under fire

Democratic Senator Tammy Duckworth slammed President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary Pete Hegseth’s military record as ‘pretty low rank’ as he faces scrutiny for controversial comments he made about women serving in combat. Duckworth, who is a combat veteran who lost both her legs and mobility in one arm serving in Iraq, appeared on CBS News’ Face the Nation where she was asked about the TV personality tapped to head the Pentagon. She said his comments about women in combat show he does not understand where the military is and called him unqualified for the role.

Bishop TD Jakes suffers medical emergency during church sermon as horrified congregation looks on

A celebrity bishop appeared to suffer a medical emergency mid-sermon at his megachurch in Dallas. Bishop TD Jakes, 67, was filmed involuntarily shaking during the ordeal, at The Potter’s House megachurch Sunday. The place of worship has a capacity of about 8,000, and the crowd was seen reacting to Jakes’ episode in real-time.

Aussie teen rages over Sydney property prices

A young Australian has slammed the country’s housing crisis as ‘genuinely ridiculous’ after receiving a flyer from a real estate agency that showcased ordinary properties that all sold for more than $1million. Matt, a 19-year-old from Sydney, expressed his frustration with the state of Australia’s property market after seeing the flyer, which highlighted 53 homes sold in October. The properties were located in suburbs about one hour west of Sydney’s CBD, including Quakers Hill, Box Hill, Blacktown, and Riverstone.

Inside Chelsea’s trendy King’s Road as thieves target shoppers at luxury boutiques to steal 30 phones a day – after Christine Lampard fell victim to muggers

Shoppers who have their mobile phones stolen on the fashionable King’s Road, like Christine Lampard, won’t get them back, say security guards who work in the upmarket boutiques targeted by street thieves. After the Loose Women presenter Christine revealed how a security guard shrugged and said, ‘there’s at least 30 a day stolen out here,’ after she had her phone snatched while shopping along the exclusive road in Chelsea, southwest London, others warned they are powerless to stop the thefts. Christine, 45 described being the victim of the mobile phone crime wave sweeping the capital while speaking with fellow Loose Women, Olivia Attwood, Judi Love, and Brenda Edwards, about policing and Keir Starmer’s right to prioritise ‘physical crime’ after journalists were arrested over social media posts.

PETER VAN ONSELEN: The rot at the core of Team Albo has been exposed by these shady last minute acts – including a startling admission about the misinformation bill

The poor priorities and inconsistencies of Anthony Albanese’s government are nearly summed up by the political manoeuvres taking place as we enter the final parliamentary sitting period before the summer break. They are tangible evidence for why Labor is floundering in the polls in just its first term in power. On the one hand, Labor spent months telling us its misinformation bill was a vital reform aimed at stamping out… you guessed it, misinformation in public discourse.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *