My Cart

loader
Loading...

Photofile: Helen Levitt


  • Thames & Hudson
  • by Jean-Franþois Chevrier
Brooklyn-born photographer Helen Levitt (1913–2009) was an assistant to Walker Evans and a friend of Henri Cartier-Bresson, but forged her own path with fierce independence and endless curiosity about the world around her. She is best known for her street photography, capturing children at play on the streets of Depression-era New York and chalk drawings on walls, but she also cast her eye upon the adult world, seeking out moments of movement, transience and theatricality.

ISBN 9780500411193 | E | PB+
€18,95
at this moment not in stock
Quantity
More Information
Publisher Thames & Hudson
ISBN 9780500411193
Author(s) Jean-Franþois Chevrier
Publication date July 2021
Edition Paperback with flaps
Dimensions 190 x 125 mm
Illustrations 68 col.ill.
Pages 144
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Description

Brooklyn-born photographer Helen Levitt (1913–2009) was an assistant to Walker Evans and a friend of Henri Cartier-Bresson, but forged her own path with fierce independence and endless curiosity about the world around her. She is best known for her street photography, capturing children at play on the streets of Depression-era New York and chalk drawings on walls, but she also cast her eye upon the adult world, seeking out moments of movement, transience and theatricality.

Following her first solo exhibition at MoMA in 1943, she devoted more than a decade to filmmaking, but returned to photography in the late 1950s and began to work in colour as well as black and white. Lyrical and witty, her images reveal the streets of New York as flowing with life and unexpected poetry.