spacerlogospacer
spacer
With the Composer, Lensbaby introduces a completely new lens, based on a ball and socket configuration that delivers smooth selective focus photography with unparalleled ease.

Bulb Magazine
Artist
You are creative and want to join an exciting artistic community. Register now to exhibit.
Exhibitor
You have an artistic event to promote. You can submit it to our services for a wide diffusion over different channels.
Announcer
You would like to target a creative audience. We offer different display zones on the site.
Weegee, Murder Is My Business, Photography - International Center of Photography, New York, United-States
Image credit Weegee, At an East Side Murder, 1943. © Weegee/International Center of Photography.

Event venueevent venue

International Center of Photography

ICP
1133 Avenue of the Americas
43rd Street
NY 10036 New York
United-States
T 212.857.0000
Tuesday–Wednesday: 10:00 am–6:00 pm
Thursday–Friday: 10:00 am–8:00 pm
Saturday–Sunday: 10:00 am–6:00 pm
Closed: Mondays
Closed: New Year's Day, January 1;
Independence Day, July 4; Thanksgiving Day; Christmas, December 25.

Socialsocial

 Published February 5, 2012 at 04:14pm
 Seen 1669 times

Weegee

Murder Is My Business
International Center of Photography, Photography, New York, United-States
Friday January 20, 2012 - Sunday September 2, 2012 - Event ended.

For an intense decade between 1935 and 1946, Weegee (1899–1968) was one of the most relentlessly inventive figures in American photography. His graphically dramatic and often lurid photographs of New York crimes and news events set the standard for what has become known as tabloid journalism.

Share this page on Facebook0
Share this page on Pinterest
0
Share this page on Google+0
Share this page on LinkedIn0
Share this page on StumbleUpon0
Share this page on Tumblr0
Freelancing for a variety of New York newspapers and photo agencies, and later working as a stringer for the short-lived liberal daily PM (1940–48), Weegee established a way of combining photographs and texts that was distinctly different from that promoted by other picture magazines, such as LIFE. Utilizing other distribution venues, Weegee also wrote extensively (including his autobiographical Naked City, published in 1945) and organized his own exhibitions at the Photo League. This exhibition draws upon the extensive Weegee Archive at ICP and includes environmental recreations of Weegee's apartment and exhibitions. The exhibition is organized by ICP Chief Curator Brian Wallis.

Gangland murders, gruesome car crashes, and perilous tenement fires were for the photographer Weegee (1899—1968) the staples of his flashlit black-and-white work as a freelance photojournalist in the mid-1930s. Such graphically dramatic and sometimes sensationalistic photographs of New York crimes and news events set the standard for what has since become known as tabloid journalism. In fact, for one intense decade, between 1935 and 1946, Weegee was perhaps the most relentlessly inventive figure in American photography. A surprising new exhibition at the International Center of Photography (1133 Avenue of the Americas at 43rd Street), titled Weegee: Murder Is My Business and organized by ICP Chief Curator Brian Wallis, will present some rare examples of Weegee’s most famous and iconic images, and will consider his early work in the context of its original presentation in historical newspapers and exhibitions, as well as Weegee’s own books and films.

Taking its title from Weegee’s self-curated exhibition at the Photo League in 1941, Murder Is My Businesslooks at the urban violence and mayhem that was the focus of his early work. As a freelance photographer at a time when New York City had at least eight daily newspapers and when wire services were just beginning to handle photos, Weegee was challenged to capture unique images of newsworthy events and distribute them quickly. He worked almost exclusively at night, setting out from his small apartment across from police headquarters when news of a new crime came chattering across his police-band radio receiver. Often arriving before the police themselves, Weegee carefully cased each scene to discover the best angle. Murders, he claimed, were the easiest to photograph because the subjects never moved or got temperamental.

Weegee’s rising career as a news photographer in the 1930s coincided with the heyday of Murder Inc., the Jewish gang from Brownsville who served as paid hitmen for The Syndicate, a confederation of mostly Italian crime bosses in New York. As a wave of governmental and legal crackdowns swept the city between
1935 and 1941, the rate of organized murders of small-time wiseguys and potential stool pigeons increased dramatically. Weegee often worked closely with the police but also befriended high-profile criminals like Bugsy Siegel, Lucky Luciano, and Legs Diamond. Weegee called himself the “official photographer for Murder Inc.” and claimed to have covered 5,000 murders, a count that is perhaps only slightly exaggerated.
In asserting the true nature of his business, Weegee proudly displayed his check stub from LIFE magazine that paid him $35 for two murders, slightly more, he said, for the one that used more bullets.

Selling his photographs to a variety of New York newspapers in the 1930s, and later working as a stringer for the short-lived daily newspaper PM (1940—48), Weegee established a highly subjective approach to both photographs and texts that was distinctly different from that promoted in most dailies and picture magazines.

Utilizing other distribution venues, Weegee also wrote extensively (including his autobiographical Naked City, published in 1945) and organized his own exhibitions at the Photo League, the influential photographic organization that promoted politically committed pictures, particularly of the working classes. In 1941, Weegee installed two back-to-back exhibitions in the League’s headquarters. This visibility helped promote Weegee’s growing reputation as a news photographer, and he began stamping his prints “Weegee the Famous.” The general acceptance of his punchy photographic style, which did not shy away from lower-class subjects and humanistic narratives, led to the acquisition of his work by the Museum of Modern Art and inclusion in two group shows there, in 1943 and 1945.

“Weegee has often been dismissed as an aberration or as a naive photographer, but he was in fact one of the most original and enterprising photojournalists of the 1930s and ‘40s. His best photographs combine wit, daring, and surprisingly original points of view, particularly when considered in light of contemporaneous press photos and documentary photography. He favored unabashedly low-culture or tabloid subjects and approaches, but his Depression-era New York photographs need to be considered seriously alongside other key documentarians of the thirties, such as Dorothea Lange, Robert Capa, Walker Evans, and Berenice Abbott,” said Wallis.

The exhibition will feature over 100 original photographs, drawn primarily from the comprehensive Weegee Archive of over 20,000 prints at ICP, as well as period newspapers, magazines, and films. It will also include partial reconstructions of Weegee’s studio and his Photo League exhibition. The four galleries will each feature a touch-screen monitor allowing visitors to explore further details regarding the images and artifacts in that room.
This exhibition was made possible with support from the ICP Exhibitions Committee, The David Berg Foundation, an Anonymous donor, and with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. The touch screen content was produced by Documentary Arts in association with Octothorp Studio.

Advertisingadvertisingadvertise here, learn more+


Facebook Twitter Stumble Upon Bookmarks E-Mail Print
About Art Limited

Our account offer

Become a member

Behind the scene

The team

Editors & selections

Members

Contact us

Help & FAQ
Artwork galleries

Art Limited selection

Best of day

Best of week

Best of month

Latest artworks

Visa selection

Contest winners

Advanced search
Art Limited

Permanent contest

Competition

Group projects

Forums

Art agenda

Latest days

Currently

Future events

Submit an event
Partnership

Datacolor

DUPON Laboratory

Lensbaby

Soura Magazine

Scuadra

Blur Magazine

Dolist.net

Ovh
Services

Shop & goodies

Press & advertising

Events presentation

Contest prize
Follow us
Subscribe to newsletter

Facebook
Facebook

Twitter
Twitter

Google+
Google+

Pinterest
Pinterest

StumbleUpon
StumbleUpon
Browse editor choice from best artworks in low-definition (thumbails) Editor choice (SD)Browse editor choice from best artworks in high-definition Editor choice (HD)Artistics agenda, events, exhibitions from the world of Arts Art Agenda (latest)Visa artwork selection is an automatic pre-selection based on appreciation, creativity and constant qualitative assessment of achievement algorithm detection, resulting in immediate appearance in this feed when it matches its parameters. The formula may vary depending on how Art Limited staff wants to improve the level and quality of the site. This feed is public. Visa Selection (HD)
© Art Limited, Bordeaux, France - v12.2.0 - All rights reserved 2005-2013