Thursday, October 29, 2009

New York/East New York


East New York, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


East New York, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

Walking to the subway station at Broadway Junction in East New York. Stop. Toy Story poster and red wall. Walk forward. Stop. Bus shelter with seated people and figures high above.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

New York/East New York


East New York, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


East New York, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

Without comment.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

New York/East New York


East New York, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

On the job in East New York shooting a building. More to come.

Friday, October 23, 2009

New York/East 4th Street


East 4th Street between Second and Third Avenues, 1980 (4x5 film)
© Brian Rose/Ed Fausty

When I first arrived in New York in the summer of 1977--the day of the blackout--I got off the train early, picked up a copy of the Village Voice, perused the classifieds for available apartments, and by noon, had scored a sublet in a rundown tenement on East 4th Street between Second and Third Avenues.

I lived there for about 15 years before moving to Stanton Street, five blocks south, and before my back and forth life between Amsterdam and New York. Working out of that tiny apartment on 4th Street with bathtub in the kitchen and toilet in the hall, I did photographs of the Lower East Side, New York City parks, began my long-term documentation of the Iron Curtain and Berlin, and wrote many of my best songs. Suzanne Vega crashed on my couch a number of times, and one day came by to audition her new song "The Queen of the Soldier" for me. The first Fast Folk magazine inserts were pasted up in my apartment and typed out on a borrowed IBM Selectric.

I met my wife, Renée Schoonbeek, on the block as well. She and her friend Josja van der Veer came from the Netherlands as students to do research on New York housing, and they interned with the Cooper Square Committee, a housing advocacy group that I served on the steering committe of, and briefly chaired. We met in front of Cooper Square's office just to the left of the photograph above. Together we helped establish the Cooper Square MHA, which continues to maintain affordable housing in more than two dozen buildings in the neighborhood.

Last night, Cooper Square celebrated its 50th anniversary and honored Frances Goldin, co-founder of the organization, literary agent, and a Lower East Side treasure. At times fiery and uncompromising, but at critical moments practical and savvy, she inspired us to fight for low income housing in the face of overwhelming odds. Although most people know her primarily as a firebrand, she led one of the most effective community planning efforts in the city, perhaps in the United States--one that scholars will study for years.

The tenements of 4th Street were renovated one by one, shuffling residents around but displacing no one, and the many theaters and other cultural institutions have formed a cultural district called Fourth Arts Block. The historic streetscape was preserved, and the people--a glorious crazy melting pot of folks--remain here to stay. This week the Village Voice named it the Best City Block, " a veritable People's Republic of East 4th Street--right here in Bloomberg Town!"

Monday, October 19, 2009

New York/Washington, D.C.


Washington, D.C. -- © Brian Rose

Continuing the unintentional vintage automobile theme from below. I've been a bit busy lately with photo shoots and a quick trip down to Washington, D.C. Took the picture above while parking my rental car.

Hope to report on the Robert Frank show at the Metropolitan soon. Will be traveling to Berlin in a few weeks to do more photographs for my book proposal, and I'm looking forward to being there on the 20th anniversary of the opening of the Wall.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

New York/Greenpoint


Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

And Jesus! Wit dat, he pulls it out of his pocket, an' so help me, but he's got it - he's tellin' duh troot - a big map of duh whole f______ place with all duh different pahts mahked out. You know - Canarsie an' East Noo Yawk an' Flatbush, Bensonhoist, Sout' Brooklyn, duh Heights, Bay Ridge, Greenpernt - duh whole goddam layout, he's got it right deh on duh map.
"You been to any of dose places?" I says.
"Sure," he says. "I been to most of 'em. I was down in Red Hook just last night," he says.
"Jesus! Red Hook!" I says. "Whatcha do down deh?"
"Oh," he says, "nuttin' much. I just walked aroun'. I went into a coupla places an' had a drink," he says, "but most of the time I just walked aroun'."
"Just walked aroun'?" I says.
"Sure," he says, "just lookin' at t'ings, y'know."

Thomas Wolfe, Only the Dead Know Brooklyn, 1935


Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Car accident shrine, Greenpoint, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

Monday, October 12, 2009

New York/Greenpoint


Newtown Creek wastewater treatment plant (the eggs) -- Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Polshek Partnership Architects -- © Brian Rose

Over the weekend I went to the Newtown Creek sewage plant to tour the famous digester eggs, iconic sludge stomachs that tower over Greenpoint and can be seen from many vantage points around the city. The tour was part of Open House
New York, a yearly event, in which architectural landmarks, not usually accessible, are open to the public.


Newtown Creek -- © Brian Rose


Adjacent to Newtown Creek wastewater treatment plant -- © Brian Rose

The eggs dominate a post-apocalyptic industrial landscape, the site of the largest oil spill in US history--still lurking beneath the surface--where ancient crumbling infrastructure meets futuristic high technology.



Newtown Creek sewage plant -- © Brian Rose


Nature walk -- © Brian Rose


Nature walk -- © Brian Rose


On Saturday I walked around with my digital camera after going up on the catwalk above the eggs. There's a "nature walk" that takes one along Newtown Creek, a walled in pathway leads through and around the treatment plant. It's both wonderful and alien. The light from a leaden sky pressed down.


N. Henry Street -- © Brian Rose

On Sunday I returned with my view camera--brilliant sunshine this time--and walked over the bridge that crosses Newtown Creek, and went up to an immense cemetery that overlooks the area. As to be expected I was chased out as soon as I set up my tripod. Photography not allowed. Fortunately, however, I was not picked up as a suspected terrorist while framing the eggs through the oil tanks next to the creek or the fluttering sunflowers on N. Henry Street.


Greenpoint Avenue -- © Brian Rose

God Bless America.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

New York/Morning Walk


Lafayette Street -- © Brian Rose


Lafayette Street -- © Brian Rose


Lafayette Street -- © Brian Rose


Lafayette Street -- © Brian Rose

Without comment.

Friday, October 09, 2009

New York/Skyline


Skyline from Long Island City -- © Brian Rose

A quick glance out the window while scouting for an upcoming architectural photo shoot.

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

New York/Primeval


Pelham Bay Park, the Bronx, 1984 (4x5 film) -- © Brian Rose

Soon after the Lower East Side project was completed in 1981 I began photographing Central Park, partly on my own, and partly working for the newly formed Central Park Conservancy. This led to further explorations of New York City's parks focusing primarily on the natural landscape throughout the five boroughs. There were sponsors, exhibitions--but no book--and eventually this work was left mostly unseen in my archive. I've always felt that these several park projects contain some of my best pure photography--images made from the raw material of the landscape--and greatly influenced how I approached the Iron Curtain landscape, a project begun in 1985.

I recently discovered that Joel Meyerowitz has published a book--Legacy: The Preservation of Wilderness in New York City Parks--covering much of the same ground as my work from 20 years ago. Seeing it stopped me dead in my tracks, a little stunned. It's obvious that he was unaware of my earlier work, also done in color with a view camera, so I can hardly complain. But it leaves me, nevertheless, with a feeling of loss.


Inwood Park, Manhattan, 1984 (4x5 film) -- © Brian Rose

It's a beautiful book, of course, as one would expect from Meyerowitz, who assiduously explored the far reaches of the city. And an exhibition opens this week at the Museum of the City of New York. So, what to do now with my work, the hundreds of negatives, years of effort?

The answer, as best I can do for the moment, is New York primeval, a web presentation of my natural parks work. It includes almost 70 images along with documentation of how things came about, who funded it, and where it was exhibited. Rather than order the photographs geographically as in Meyerowitz's book, I've made a continuous flow of images, sequenced sometimes by place, but often just by what feels right to me. I have identified the boroughs in which the photos were made.

In the coming days I'll link the site up to my homepage. And then move on.

Monday, October 05, 2009

New York/Bensonhurst


Under the El in Bensonhurst -- © Brian Rose

I was in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn scouting for a client. I'm photographing a new cafeteria addition to a large public high school. The neighborhood around the subway stop is an absolutely crazy hodge podge of shops: King Henry's entertainment kingdom, two pet stores--La Bella Pooch and the Puppy Boutique--a fresh fish store, a gunshop, the Him and Her Cafe--which serves colorful drinks to Asian people--a Columbian fast food restaurant decked out in bright orange with multiple TVs hanging from the ceiling, a car audio shop with its windows filled with dozens of trophies won for, you guessed it, car audio systems, and a photography studio, its windows filled with kitschy weddings and graduations, etc. This was all on two blocks of street under the elevated D train line, and I'm leaving stuff out.


Bensonhurst lions -- © Brian Rose


Him and Her Cafe -- © Brian Rose


La Bella Pooch and the Puppy Boutique -- © Brian Rose

Friday, October 02, 2009

New York/Bensonhurst


Bensonhurst, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Bensonhurst -- © Brian Rose

Without comment.

Thursday, October 01, 2009

New York/Bensonhurst


Bensonhurst, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose


Bensonhurst, Brooklyn -- © Brian Rose

Without comment.