Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information
Fine Art PR Publicity Announcements News and Information

Robin Bowman and William Meyers Portfolios at The New York Public Library

The New York Public Library recently acquired two important portfolios by contemporary photographers for its Photography Collection, one showcasing a extensive sample of American teenagers throughout the country, and the other focusing on the modest charm of New York boroughs often dwarfed in fame and glamour by Manhattan. Bowman would find and introduce herself to teenagers, photograph them, and would invite them into the process of shaping the image before they made a final portrait. Bowman also asked each teenager a predetermined list of questions about their lives.

Robin Bowman’s The American Teenager, a remarkable five-year project consisting of 263 images of 419 teenagers along with full text of all interviews Bowman conducted with her subjects. In these candid and intimate photographs, Bowman charts the coming of age of the largest generation in America since the baby boomer generation in every region of the country and every socioeconomic group: from a Texas debutante to teenage gang members in New York City, from a drag queen in Georgia to a coal miner in West Virginia. Bowman’s photographs are remarkable for conveying not only a profound understanding of her subject and the various social issues facing today’s teens, but also for her technical proficiency in producing formally beautiful and arresting images.

Robin Bowman, a 2005 W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fellow, is a photojournalist devoted to documenting the poignant social and political issues of our age. It’s Complicated: The American Teenager, a book of photographs and interviews was published in 2007 by Umbrage Editions and is about to go into its second printing. It won the Best Photography Book of the 2008 Independent Book Publishers Awards; was named as one of the top ten books for young people by the YALSA, a division of the American Library Association; and was selected as a 2009 Nautilus Silver Award winner.

Robin Bowman has been working as a freelance photojournalist for 26 years, documenting the most poignant international social and political issues of our time. Her photographs have appeared in publications worldwide, including The New Yorker, Life, Time, and Newsweek. Her coverage has included: The Fate of the Missing in Guatemala, The Fight Against Child Abuse in America, Scars of War in Uganda. Bowman spent six years covering the Zapatista National Liberation Army’s fight for the rights of the indigenous peoples of Chiapas, Mexico.

William Meyers’s Outer Boroughs: New York Beyond Manhattan, is a series of 86 color, and black and white prints of rarely photographed neighborhoods in the less celebrated boroughs of Brooklyn, Bronx, Queens, and Staten Island. Through compelling streetscapes and cityscapes, evocative pictures of structures, objects, interiors, group shots, and candid portraits of individuals, Meyers pays tribute to the outer boroughs and fills an important and veritable void in photography of the changing city.

Historical photographs of New York City are almost exclusively of landmarks, buildings, and streets in Manhattan. Among the names likely to be thought of as New York City street photographers, Berenice Abbott, Arthur Fellig, and Helen Levitt solely worked in Manhattan. William Meyers’s photography explores unsung sections in the outer boroughs that are not extensions of Manhattan or part of the aura of Manhattan. They represent the quotidian, unsung places where most of the city inhabitants live and work. In Meyers’s words, “they are the outer boroughs of the spirit as well as of the physical city. This is a terrain that is more distant from Manhattan than are certain sections of London or Paris or Rome.”

William Meyers spent much of the last decade tromping around the less-visited neighborhoods of Queens, Bronx, Brooklyn and Staten Island taking photographs for Outer Boroughs: New York beyond Manhattan. Work from the project was included in the New York Now 2000 exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York, and the Jews of Brooklyn exhibition that was displayed in several city venues. The Water’s Edge, a solo exhibition featuring work from the Outer Boroughs project, is on display at the Alice Austen House Museum on Staten Island until May 1. Meyers’s photographs have been published in The New York Times, the New York Sun, the New York Press, ARTnews, City Journal, and elsewhere. One of his photographs is on permanent display at Ansche Chesed in New York where it serves as a memorial to the dead of 1939-1945. From 2002-2008 he was the regular photography critic for the New York Sun. His writing on photography has also been published by the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard, Commentary Magazine, and Nextbook.Mr. Meyers is presently working on a new project, Alternate Manhattan.