from Brooklyn Gang (1959) by Bruce Davidson |
“What did August Sander tell his sitters before he took their pictures?” the art critic John Berger asked of the expressive plein-air portraits made by this turn-of-the-century photographer. “And how did he say it so that they all believed him in the same way?” These are the kinds of questions asked and answered in Everybody Street (2013), a documentary made by Cheryl Dunn about street photographers in New York City. Profiling the likes of Bruce Davidson, Joel Meyerowitz, Boogie, Mary Ellen Mark, and the New York Photo League’s Rebecca Lepkoff with her 16 mm video camera, Dunn, a New York street photographer herself, captures the curiosity, spontaneity, and obsessional passion that drive the craft. In showcasing the work and careers of her colleagues and idols, Dunn reveals street photography as both a kinetic art and a romance. The documentary seeks to pay homage to the art and the artists while probing the distinct means by which each photographer invites their shared subject – New York City – to reveal itself anew.
Filmmaker Cheryl Dunn |
Bruce Davidson, perhaps best known for his intimate
portraits of street kids called (Brooklyn
Gang, 1959) and a two-year project from the late ‘60s in which he
photographed the most notoriously dangerous block of Harlem (East 100th Street), is, by
my account, one of the greatest living practitioners of the form, and the
extensive footage the documentary provides of this master is one of the
pleasures of the film. (Although other photographers have documented the New
York City subways, Davidson’s Subway (1980)
is the definitive work on this subject, and Dunn has the inspiration to ride
the subways with him and film him at work there. “I lived like a monk,” he
tells her of his early days starting out as a photographer, and there is something almost Jesuitical about him
and his devotional, obsessional practice of, as he describes it, waking up in
the middle of the night thrilling at the vibration of the subway going by and
rising to ride the trains and take pictures until dawn.
Bushwick, Brooklyn, 2005 by Boogie (from his "Drugs" series) |
It’s also an example of the dueling camera effect Dunn’s street footage creates. Often, her camera captures the images that I bet the photographers she’s profiling wish they had instead. But she never seeks to overshadow them. It is, rather, a sort of pas de deux: in her street footage of the Serbian émigré photographer Boogie at work, their two cameras seem playfully to engage with the same subjects. The movie interpolates Dunn’s footage with the photographs Boogie took on their outing, creating the effect of two artists pushing and challenging each other to see and experience more.
Even in the footage of the artists in their studios, which
are stationary and recorded in HD rather than sensual 16 mm film, you never
forget you are seeing through the eyes of a photographer: the camera lingers
too long on faces, catching those moments when faces relax into their true
expressions. There is also a strong historical component to the film and a
dearth of images, both by the photographers profiled in the film and the
now-deceased twentieth century street photographers who precede them. I saw the
film at its premier at Toronto’s Hot Docs festival with a very responsive
audience and I could hear people reacting to the images – laughter when a
picture was witty, and a sharp intake of breath when it gave astonishment or
surprise – and it occurred to me that I’d never heard a group of people enjoy
visual art in quite this way, loudly and viscerally and as a collective.
Visual art has the misfortune these days, like poetry, to be
perceived as a medium that can only be enjoyed in the spirit of educated,
distanced contemplation – as opposed to movies or even novels, which anyone can
enjoy. Everybody Street breaks down
that divide with a joyful, rowdy spirit, and that seems only right for an art
like street photography in which each urban subject – whether skyscrapers, subway
graffiti, or street gangs – represents a new frontier of vision, an attempt to
make visible what the pace and prejudice of everyday life renders unseen. By
taking on the subjects of her subjects, Dunn creates something like a moving
portrait of the city through multiple refracted lenses, at once a history and
an instance of the craft. It’s a complete pleasure to watch.
– Amanda Shubert is a graduate student in English at the University of Chicago. Previously, she held a curatorial fellowship at the Smith College Museum of Art in Northampton, Massachusetts, working with their collection of prints, drawings and photographs. She is a founding editor of the literary journal Full Stop.
– Amanda Shubert is a graduate student in English at the University of Chicago. Previously, she held a curatorial fellowship at the Smith College Museum of Art in Northampton, Massachusetts, working with their collection of prints, drawings and photographs. She is a founding editor of the literary journal Full Stop.
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