The exhibition Naked City features multiple prints from each of the photographer's basic subjects: Song and Dance, Drink, Party, Spectacle, Circus, Love and Sex, Crime and Disaster, Citizens, Celebrity, Art and Weegee Himself. On display also audio and film recordings of Weegee's voice, one of the great guttural Jewish New Yorkese hybrids of spoken English.
Steven Kasher Gallery is proud to present Weegee: Naked City in conjunction with two major specifically-focused Weegee exhibitions, Weegee: Naked Hollywood at MoCA and Weegee: Murder is My Business at the ICP. With over 125 Weegee prints we explore the full emotional and satirical and aesthetic ranges of Weegee's photographs of New Yorkers and other urbanites. The exhibition features multiple prints from each of Weegee's basic subjects: Song and Dance, Drink, Party, Spectacle, Circus, Love and Sex, Crime and Disaster, Citizens, Celebrity, Art and Weegee Himself. The exhibition will also feature audio and film recordings of Weegee's voice, one of the great guttural Jewish New Yorkese hybrids of spoken English.
The exhibition takes its cues from the title of Weegee's first book, Naked City, which became a bestseller, made Weegee famous, and transformed him from a journalist into an artist. It was a title with many implications. The city and its citizens exposed. The bare truth. A city that fills you with hungers, lusts, passions. A city ready to frolic. A city that makes you think bad thoughts.
No other photographer has ever portrayed a city with Weegee's level of intimacy, amorality, and complicitness -- and humor. He strips the citizens bare, all of them, poor, rich and middling. There is no looking down or looking up: he is too mixed up in everything he sees, too much part of the shenanigans, too compromised, too desperate for publicity and pay, too much the obsessive Peeping Tom. Ultimately, we feel innocent while looking at Weegee's naked city. Shame and pride are banished as we confront in our own bad and good natures, in a bald light, in the raw.
The influence of Weegee and of Naked City are incalculable. William Klein’s New York and Robert Frank's The Americans are unthinkable without it. Diane Arbus wrote: "He was SO good when he was good. Extraordinary!" Daido Moriyama, greatest of all Japanese street photographers cites Weegee (along with Warhol) as his major influence. Warhol's major subject is the tabloid imagery that Weegee pioneered and epitomized.
Opening Reception: January 12, 6-8pm
Steven Kasher Gallery
521 W. 23rd St. - New York
Gallery hours: Tuesday through Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm.
Free Admission