Cantor Arts Center
Stanford
Stanford University 328 Lomita Drive and Museum Way
650 7234177 FAX 650 7250464
WEB
Helen Levitt - Leo Rubinfien
dal 1/2/2011 al 30/4/2011
Wed-Sun 11 am - 5 pm, Thur evenings until 8 pm, including Easter Sunday

Segnalato da

Anna Koster


approfondimenti

Helen Levitt
Leo Rubinfien



 
calendario eventi  :: 




1/2/2011

Helen Levitt - Leo Rubinfien

Cantor Arts Center, Stanford

In a New York Minute / Paths through the Global City. Although the two exhibitions are separate and distinct, commonality resides in the photographers' attraction to the urban scene and in the spontaneity of their work. Rubinfien's and Levitt's works, presented in tandem, underscore changes in urban life and documentary photography over the last 60 years.


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The Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University announces two concurrent exhibitions of photography. “In a New York Minute: Photographs by Helen Levitt” and “Paths through the Global City: Photographs by Leo Rubinfien” open February 2, and both continue through May 1, 2011.

“These images by Levitt are icons of the spontaneity and eccentricity of the New York City streets. Rubinfien’s work reveals the poetry of urban life, especially the street,” said Hilarie Faberman, Ph.D., the Cantor Arts Center’s curator of modern and contemporary art. “Although the two exhibitions are separate and distinct, commonality resides in the photographers’ attraction to the urban scene and in the spontaneity of their work. Rubinfien’s and Levitt’s works, presented in tandem, underscore changes in urban life and documentary photography over the last 60 years.”

“In a New York Minute” presents 55 photographs, 41 in black and white and 11 in color, that Levitt selected as some of the most important images of her career. Levitt (1913–2009), who grew up in Brooklyn, dropped out of high school and taught herself photography while working for a commercial photographer. She enjoyed early success and gained critical acclaim as a “photographers’ photographer.” Fortune magazine published her work in its July 1939 issue on New York City. Two decades later, Levitt turned to color photography, one of the first important artists to use this medium. Levitt also produced films, and In the Street, directed and edited by Levitt and released in 1953, runs continuously in the exhibition. Photographs in the exhibition are from the collection of The Capital Group Foundation. “In a New York Minute” has been made possible by generous support from The Capital Group Foundation and the Clumeck Fund at the Cantor Arts Center.

Rubinfien (b. 1953), an acclaimed photographer and eloquent author, was born in Chicago and grew up in the Midwest and in Japan. He describes himself as an “insatiable traveler,” and his early work was characterized by an attention to what would later be referred to as “globalization.” In a 1982 review of his first solo exhibition, Art in America called Rubinfien one of the most promising of the young color photographers at that time. A Map of the East, Rubinfien’s first book of photographs, was the source for his one-person exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1992. The Corcoran Gallery of Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art exhibited works from his latest publication, Wounded Cities, a response to the tragedy of 9/11. “Paths through the Global City” presents works from these projects and two others still in progress, 30-plus black-and-white and color photographs drawn from the Center’s collection and lent by the artist.

The exhibition is made possible by The Cowles Charitable Trust and the Center’s Contemporary Collector’s Circle.

RELATED PROGRAMS
Free Tours of both exhibitions, Thursdays at 12:15 pm, Saturdays and Sundays at 2 pm
Free Lecture: Leo Rubinfien speaks, free, Thursday, February 3, 6 pm, Center auditorium
Free Film: Serious Play: The Worlds of Helen Levitt by Tanya Sleiman, free, Thursday, April 7, 6 pm, Center auditorium
Photography Class for Adults: April 2, 9, 16, fee, call 650-723-3469

Publicity Photos: For high-resolution images, contact PR Assistant Manager , Margaret Whitehorn: 650-724-3600, mmwhite@stanford.edu

Contact: Anna Koster - Head of Communications
Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University
Lomita Dr. at Museum Way
Stanford, CA 94305-5060
650-725-4657 Fax 650-725-0464
Public info line 650-723-4177
Email akoster@stanford.edu

Image from Helen Levitt's film In the Street (1941–1952), courtesy Cecile Starr

Preview Wednesday, February 2, 10 am to noon
Continental breakfast will be served

Cantor Arts Center
Stanford campus, off Palm Drive at Museum Way
open Wednesday–Sunday, 11 am–5 pm, Thursday until 8 pm
Admission is free

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