When
I moved to New York from New Orleans I became a hack tour guide. True, it’s strange for a new arrival to be
guiding New Yorkers down their own streets, but this city is not without its
ironies. I can always identify older
natives of the city. Always the first in
line, these older New Yorkers seem to have pithy answers to every question,
glib responses to my Midwestern cheer, and need to find a seat whenever limited
chairs are presented—quickly stripping even the hope of a chair from sluggish Southerners. Recently, on my neighborhood tour I abruptly
stopped and quietly waited before an abandoned storefront beneath an ancient Zenith
sign. Given a moment of stillness and
immobility it will begin, the quick watch-check and hiss: “So whewegoin?” No one ever looks up. They’ll more likely look incredulously at one
another than look up. I silently gesture
upward with a single digit, indicating a two thousand seat 1920s Loew’s
Theatre. On its etched and sooty face
are chiseled phantasmagoric masks, curling vines, and glowering griffins from
nearly a century ago.
I
tried this experiment after becoming acquainted with Rudy Burckhardt’s work,
the so called “court photographer” of the New York School. Burckhardt, too, was an outsider. And he, too, was able to show New York
anew. He did portraits for his friends,
but he also moved photography into a field of near painterly abstraction. Long before his death in 2001 at the age of
85, the Swiss-born New York photographer had displayed what poet Edwin Denby
called a “detective’s eye” talent for discovery. His work turned Ezra Pound’s modernist dictum
“Make it new!” on its head. Burckhardt would
form the new but by using the old, the seemingly pedestrian, and center his
audience on ground-level hunts to discover the ordinary sublime. His works reveal hidden treasures and
overlooked fancies beneath the noses and under the feet of rushing
urbanites. During the 1930s and 1940s
Burckhardt’s modernist photographs reveal the extent of his collaboration and
close connection to the New York School artists. Characterizing himself as “never really
political,” he was a photographer who reflected his epoch. It was a Romantic time of artistic expression
where artists, caught between the dueling fires of capitalism and communism,
turned inward and discovered new abstractions on the canvas while eschewing the
ease of unity and (what these few argued) the constraints of objective
clarity. Burckhardt was one of a series
of artists who, according to painter Mark Rothko, attempted to show the
“miraculous” and unveil “revelations” through transcendental discoveries, not
in the manner of 19th century Romantic exoticism—a cult of the
strange and unfamiliar—but instead through using careful framing to show normal
things and places anew.
Burckhardt, according to Vincent Katz was “renowned for
not being famous.” And whenever a review
or collection of his work is discussed, inevitably John Ashberry’s quote will
be unearthed: “Rudy Burckhardt is a subterranean monument…he is the insider tip.” Burckhardt’s work was created within a
thematic matrix of New York art. He
learned from and was inspired by other contemporary artists and moved his own
medium, photography, into new realms. One
simply cannot discuss the Romanticism of Burckhardt’s work without first
describing the arc of New York photography before and leading up to the
1940s. Mentioning the prevailing moods
and trends of his contemporaries is as crucial as seeing his own works in
totality. Discussing Alfred Stieglitz
and Bernice Abbott’s work—slightly before and concurrent with Burckhardt’s photos—will
illustrate a Romantic theme in the modern period (and its individual
manifestation in art) and demonstrate the dramatic contrasts in style and
message.
It
is said that Modern Man’s struggle can be characterized as “Romantic.” Why? In
the pre-WWI years urban artists and thinkers entwined Man’s progress to
artistic modernism. This was a time of
modernist rebellion in the form of Futurists and Dadaists. Weren’t all of these movements, at bottom,
Romantic reactions to and from Modern times?
With chartered sidewalks, nation-states, tentacle corporations, income
taxes, and public media, it is difficult to argue that an individual struggling
against such faceless “controls” is not, in large part, Romantic. Burckhardt was a Romantic but so were
photographers before and after him. And
I hope to tease out what was unique and enduring about Burckhardt through
contrasts with those contemporaries. Meyer
Shapiro captures this feeling well in “On the Humanity of Abstract Painting,” writing,
“This art is deeply rooted, I believe, in the self and its relation to the
surrounding world…a culture that becomes increasingly organized through
industry, economy and the state intensifies the desire of the artist to create
forms that will manifest his liberty in this striking way—a liberty that…is
associated with harmony and achieves stability.”
Alfred Steiglitz was such a liberated artist. His aim was to legitimate modern photography
as a serious art form and free it from the constraints imposed by “old world
views.” It was Alfred Stieglitz. Called “the father of modern photography” Stieglitz’s
Romantic views regarding the individuality of the artist would later endure and
adapt within the New York School. He
planned to “redeem the world with his camera,” by shocking America into the 20th
century and offering the viewer a new way of seeing. Stieglitz written recollections of capturing
his most famous picture, “Winter on Fifth Avenue,” demonstrates both
Stieglitz’s Romantic aims and the consternation such photography received. Stieglitz
writes:
On Washington’s
birthday in 1893 a great blizzard raged in NY.
I stood on a corner on 5th avenue watching the lumbering
stagecoaches appear through the blinding snow and move northward on the
avenue. The question formed itself: Could what I was experiencing, seeing, be put
down with the slow plates and lenses available. The light was dim, knowing that
where there is light one can photograph, I decided to make an exposure. After three hours of standing in the blinding
snow I saw the stage coach come struggling up the street with the driver
lashing his horses onward. At that point
I was nearly out of my head but I got the exposure I wanted.
Later, when Stieglitz arrived at the New York Society for
Amateur Photographers he was met with consternation by his cohorts, “Before my
negative was dry I showed everyone with great excitement. They told me to throw it away. It was blurred, it wasn’t sharp. I told them the negative is exactly what I
wanted it to be. What I was driving at
was not about blurred or sharp.” The
picture captures the wild race of modernity—the restless movement, the gnashing
urgency, and the fast-paced urban shock that would bring New York City into the
center of the art world. Stieglitz was
feverish with ambitions for this new medium.
He tersely declared, “I was born in Hoboken. I am an American. Photography is my passion.” But he also helped
to foment the famed and influential “Armory show” which was an overview of
Cezanne, Gougin, Picasso, Van Gogh, and others, introducing Americans to
Modernism. Photographing as well as editing and publishing The American Amateur Photographer, Camera Notes, and Camera Work, Stieglitz nearly worked
himself to death in his efforts to realize his creative visions.
Earlier,
Stieglitz’s aim was to legitimate photography as an individual art and later, having comported to a new
Post-Pictorialist form, to capture the city in its frantic becoming—a new
Cubist-derived style for, one could argue, a Cubist derived modern city. His work was a fantastic documentation of the
changes the “old New York” was undergoing at the century’s turning. In his image “Old and New New York,”
Stieglitz eerily captures corniced Victorian row houses surrounded on all sides
by new structures of steel and glass. One
must ask, looking at such a picture, which buildings are “real”? The top-heavy rooftops and stout chimneys of
row houses look so fixed, ossified, regal.
But the viewer is looking at ghosts.
On the image’s right, for scale, a man stands alone gazing over a
crowded street near a narrow brick structure.
Between this edifice on the far right and the skinless spectral
structure towering above the rear, sits a New York long since disappeared. In the background, there are steel ghosts to
come and in the foreground, brick ghosts of a bygone era. Stieglitz deftly captures a struggle between
anachronism and modernity, a conflagration where in Marx’s term “all that is
solid melts into air.” From his black
room, this early master created the photographic vocabulary and Romantic
tenacity later shutterbugs “searching for the city” could use. His modernist disposition and his
individualism would make Stieglitz “the guy to beat” for anyone hoping to look
at New York anew.
Stieglitz’s
picture of Chelsea’s Flatiron building is one of his more renowned New York works
and illustrates a building that Rudy Burckhardt would later capture. The lonely, crooked timber of a snowy tree stands
in the foreground while in the background (he writes) “a building moved toward
me like the bow of a monster ocean-steamer—a picture of the new America that
was still in the making.” Notice how a
static building “moves” to an early modernist like Stieglitz. Around his Flatiron is only sky—like Caspar
David Freidrich’s Wanderer. Its emergence from a snow-dusted park,
starkly alone, is an irrepressibly modern scene. A radically different view of the Flatiron
building became Rudy Burckhardt’s most famous—or at least most reproduced
photograph. Both Stieglitz and
Burckhardt shoot the building in black and white but the use of the building,
its framing, and the narrative one might attach to it greatly differ.
On
an oppressive summer day in 1947 Burckhardt snapped a picture of Chelsea’s
Flatiron building, whose long shadow plunges downward bifurcating the streets
into two crowded bright throngs of traffic and pedestrians. Not only does the addition of the shadow to
the building create a simulacrum of Manhattan’s island geography, it also bears
witness to “an innocent jaunty New York, comfortably settled into its own skin”
(Katz 22). Where Stieglitz was excited
about the new buildings that seem to slice through the city—his Flatiron almost
resembles a razor cutting through snowy woods—Burckhardt has a more subtle and ironic
view of the city. His Flatiron is
undoubtedly a locus but it is surrounded by numerous other sights: shadows, buses, flags, roads. It is a New York scene captured in a new way. Stieglitz
titled one image of a smoking locomotive “The Hand of Man” and one of stretched
skyscrapers “City of Ambition.” These
are titles of an early modernist’s hope and expectation for a glorious
twentieth century. Decades later, in a
century blighted by chaos and dashed dreams, Burckhardt’s work was devoid of such
confident declarations in both title and content.
A
critic of Stieglitz’s early soft-focused Pictorial work and his cheerleading
for “the new” was a contemporary of Rudy Burckhardt, Berenice Abbot. She was a Midwesterner known for her
“straight photography” and her desire to “empower” her viewers. Her book “Changing New York” offered
unmolested images of New York’s mid-century germination and created a catalogue
of the city’s magisterial architecture.
The awing photographs give rooftop and pedestrian views of the city,
diversifying the viewer’s perspective but always highlighting New York’s
imperious scale. In a work like “Murray
Hill Hotel,” the viewer feels like a dust bunny on the floor of a Gothic
nave. Foreground balconies wend
crookedly while limestone towers in the background fly titanically upward. Other photographs like the “Daily News
Building, 1935” portray an eagle’s nest view of the buildings below.
The
asymmetrical figures of buildings, as in others, soar skyward with a shining
skin of windows glittering above rows of ramshackle tenements—those simple,
unimpressive boxes nearly lost in the shadows below. Abbott like other photographers in the 1930s
hoped to give a comprehensive if not exhaustive view of New York—to capture, to
show, and to interpret it all. Even her view of a newsstand portrays
scale. In her 1935 photograph
“Newsstand” a single man, looking like something out of Swift’s Lilliput and
Blefuscu, is whelmed by a collage of dozens of dailies, magazines, best
sellers, mysteries, sodas, posters, cigars, and comics. The figure of a girlie poster, her arms
outstretched, seems as tall as the shrunken consumer. This is a New York of scale, of business, and
of their dark social consequence: a
desire for escape. No more humorous
contrast could be made of Abbott’s style than Burckhardt’s newsstands.
Burckhardt
and the artists in the New York School understood or at least recognized the
primacy of the commonplace in modern America.
While withdrawing inward the New York School artists also ambushed the
dustbin of history: surveying the
cracks, telescoping the splatters, and memorizing the paint smears for
inspiration. Perl writes in New Art City, “there was a shared sense
of the quotidian as defying any pattern that a person might imagine…a great
city was an open-ended demonstration of the paradoxical nature of the modern
dialectic” (84-5). Poet Edwin Denby
wrote about the street philosophy of the New York School artists, men like
Burckhardt and de Kooning who developed a “Sherlock Holmes” way of looking:
“Sometimes while we (de Kooning and Denby) were walking through our part of
town (Chelsea), Burckhardt pointed out details to me—a gesture, a crack, some
rubbish, a glimmer—in which for an instant nature revealed that mystery which
we can otherwise recognize in masterpieces.
I could not see it in the details he pointed out to me, but I knew, like
anyone else, the kind of perception he was referring to, the flash we call
beauty which is happening just then. He
looked quite precisely in order to record exactly what was going on there.” This way of seeing is what was exciting about
these artists. For painters, the work
unveiled itself as painters painted.
They were taking a second glance at the world and reclaiming
capitalism’s leftovers and discards as their own—they were in Perl’s words,
“Connoisseurs of modern instability.”
The
buildings in Burckhardt’s frames are not meant to overwhelm (like Abbott) or
stress the power of the age (like Stieglitz) but to empathize with the viewer, for
he is seeing what a New Yorker would (or could) see. Phillip Lopate said that Burckhardt’s
photograph was “more playful, tender, less melodramatic, more true to the
spirit of the everyday…” and achieved a “closeness.” Close, especially for an urban viewer who
would recognize the quick flicks of beauty one sees in a crowd, but also “close”
in a humanistic sense—a certain warmth in his execution. Burckhardt’s images often lack aesthetic
precision. In a way, his work is not
always about the “total image.” Whereas
other photographers may seek out and later tailor images for their dramatic or
beautiful entirety, Burckhardt’s work stands defiantly within the matrix of its
own vocabulary. His works are often
quick, visually imbalanced, and unemotional.
Their importance redirects the viewer’s glance towards both fixed and
ephermeral fancies of shape, light, and pattern. The quotidian objects (fire hydrants, marble,
tiling, etc.) may be overlooked in a single viewing which is why, once you
start, it is indeed necessary to see Burckhardt’s entire body of work.
Vincent
Katz wrote, “When Burckhardt is shooting at eye-level from the window or roof
of another skyscraper, his rooftops are serenely dispersed like castle turrets;
and one is made especially aware of the odd, homey constructions—water towers,
roof gardens, attics, skylights, and so on—by which the skyline is tamed and
humanized” (RB 22). Many of the New York
School were immigrants and it is those unfed eyes of the foreigner, not the
bleary eyes of the local, which gaze hungrily at the subtle beauties of the
street. Mix together an age of ~isms,
economic collapse, and Cubist fascinations, and you will get individuals
looking inward for answers and finding it in any common day’s stroll. On one visit to William de Kooning’s
apartment (he was a neighbor) Burckhardt spoke about the difficulty of
photography. De Kooning, rarely one to
give advice crumpled up a piece of paper and suggested Burckhardt photograph
it. Though he wasn’t “interested” at the
time, Burckhardt never forgave himself for not immediately taking de Kooning’s
advice. Edwin Denby’s essay about walks
with William de Kooning and Burckhardt speaks to this approach of seeing. He writes,
…Rudy Burckhardt was taking
photographs of New York that keep open the moment its transient buildings
spread their unknown and unequalled harmonies of scale. I could watch the scale like a magnanimous
motion on these undistorted photographs; but in everyday looking about, it kept
spreading the field of sight. At the time
we all talked a great deal about scale in new York , and about the difference
of instinctive scale in signs, painted color, clothes, gestures, everyday
expressions between Europe and America.
We were happy to be in a city the beauty of which was unknown, uncozy,
and not small scale. (Lopate 11)
Jed Perl writes in
New Art City that Burckhardt had the
eye of a “dialectical comedian” and the “ironist’s sense of poking fun…”(Perl
68). In Burckhardt and Denby’s handmade
book New York, N. Why? the viewer is
introduced to New York newsstands but they are Burckhardt stands. While Abbott’s style stresses the immensity
of the city and consequently the smallness of its people, Burckhardt’s image
decapitates the stand and allows the viewer to probe the small nest of
papers. The wondrous variety of papers
is stimulating but it is their shapes and repeated patterns that catch the viewer’s
eye. And in between dime cigars or spy
drivel sits the bald and once formidable spud skull of Mussolini. All is objectively equal in this image. It’s as if Burckhardt is winking, encouraging
the viewer to smile and to recognize this captured reality for what is framed,
not what it really is. “Look closer,” he
seems to insinuate. Look at the wildly
different fonts, the bubbly rush of font and haze of numbers and letters. The adornments and patterns were Burckhardt’s
secret discovery, they were “his own private New York” (RB 22).
The
gestures of Burckhardt’s newsstand though “realistic” are not didactic. Anita Haldermann argued this point somewhat
excessively writing, “The details Burckhardt puts into his picture have no
narrative potential, but serve as formal elements in a picture that is
comparable to a collage” (NYM 11). They
aren’t a shrill cry against capital—Burckhardt was “neither interested in
politics nor did he have a critical view of society” (11). Instead, his work is a blithe recognition of
collage-like shapes, irregular forms, and subtle compositions that are “ready-made”
about the streets. His newsstands
highlight the unintended patterns of stacked parallelograms and, by framing
them with his lens, direct the viewer toward quiet activity along the rush of
the street. Moreover, he was making a
strong statement against a prevailing view of the age. In American
Photographs in 1938, the front cover stated: “The use of the visual arts to show us our
own moral and economic situation has today fallen almost completely into the
hands of the photographer. It is for him
to fix and to reveal the whole aspect of our society: to record for the future our disasters and
our claims to divinity.” Burckhardt
simply rejected the role of fixer, and consequently made a very strong argument—namely,
that an artist did not need to provide a soothing elixir or cure to society’s
ills. However, what he could do is
identify beauty and demonstrate that its existence was still possible. Could an idea have been more radical in an
age exemplified by Walker Evans portraits?
Perhaps one could label Burckhardt a “purist” because his photographs,
in sum, were about “pure photography.”
Writing
about a backlash to this purist sensibility in abstract paintings Shapiro
writes, “In recent work, puzzled and annoyed observers have found an artless
spontaneity which they are happy to compare with the daubing of the monkey in
the zoo. When the artist represented the
world around him, he was called the ape of nature; when he paints abstractly,
he is likened to the monkey who smears and splatters. It seems that the artist cannot escape his
animal nature.” Maybe the bravest thing,
after Hiroshima, Kolyma, and Belsen was to keep on producing art and, despite
Man’s diminished state, continue as one of Faulkner’s dark visions of the last
man “at the ding dong of doom” still enduring, still reaching for the sublime. Shapiro spoke about the fear of removing
representation in art which would inevitably damage communication. He writes, “You cannot extract a message from
a painting by ordinary means; the usual rules of communication do not hold
here, there is no clear code or fixed vocabulary…” The viewer, like the artist, was on his
own. The New York School was ominously
saying: Sink or swim in those swirls of
paint, those checkered advertisements bespattered across marble. It was the viewer’s task to individuate a
meaning from beauty, perhaps even leaning to a nearby patron and inquiring,
“So, what do you think?” The art was a
radical means of connection.
Rudy
Burckhardt was an admirer of Mondrian.
In an interview he said, “I always enjoyed painters more than
photographers. Most photographers are
kind of illiterate and even now most writing about photography is kind of
unreadable.” This love of painters,
particularly Mondrian, can be seen in images like “New York, 1939” where tiles are placed in geometric patterns
according to color. A narrow black
series of tiles ring a large patch of white tiles. Within this patch are two interior “X” shape
cubes staring out like dice. A clear nod
to Mondrian’s labored pattern-making in seminal works like “Broadway Boogie
Woogie.” If Mondrian begat Burckhardt,
Delacroix was Mondrian’s progenitor. The
French Romantic famously said the he was “Passionately in love with passion but
coldly determined to express passion as clearly as possible.” Mondrian, like Burckhardt, had such a passion
and it arose in the form of a watchtower-like ability of identifying the new as
well as a panther’s patience for the numinous.
Burckhardt would wait all morning for just the right shot often
returning home lamenting “There was nothing to see.” How long did he have to wait to discover “Circles”? This image, one of his most playful, captures
a woman’s feet as she crosses a sewer drain.
What she doesn’t realize is that the sickles and swirls of her dress
match the circles under her feet. “Circles”
like “Midtwon, New York” are of women’s dress designs which allude to Kandinsky-like
spheres. And there is also a touch of Barnett
Newman in his work. In a 1940 shot
called “Wood Fence” Burckhardt identified a spiking series of painted fence
posts strangely bisected by two unpainted posts. And in “Jumbo Malted” Burckhardt ignored the
loopy figures of the advertisements and instead focused on a Newman-like zip
which balanced the spatial structure. Mondrian and Rothko both agonized
endlessly over their works despite its minimal quality. These
men viewed a work’s sublime expression as a portal to “the eternal.” Katz
says of Burckhardt’s work, “It is the attention paid to a scene to which most
people would have given only a passing glance that creates an atmosphere of
great emotional focus.” Mondrian zoomed out while Burckhardt zoomed in. He was the first to employ Mondrian’s
minimalism to street photography (Katz 12).
Denby later put into words much of what Burckhardt put on film, “The
sidewalk cracks, gumspots, the water, the bits of refuse,/They reach out and
bloom under arclight, neonlight---…/These pictures, sat on by the cats that
watch the slums,/Are a bouquet luck has dropped here suitable to mortals” (Perl
97).
Burckhardt’s
photographs were more abstracted and plainspoken then some of the heavier works
by other contemporary photographers like Walker Evans, Lisette Model, and Robert
Frank. Evans toured the rural South
exposing the hidden economic gulf between rich and poor. And similarly, Robert Frank later contributed
his 1950s series Americans which
highlighted the social divisions and racial inequities in America. These works showed dark visions of America
and portrayed Americans scrabbling on the lower slopes of an “American Dream”
illusion, a myth, a set-up forged by the fur-wrapped rich.
Burckhardt’s
desire to absent himself from the nation’s social history was brave and
atypical. He once mentioned that after
his father’s death he was unable to cry saying, “I find that I don’t feel what
I’m supposed to be feeling at certain times.
I’ve always been this way…I used to think there was something wrong with
me” (Katz 10.) But it was from this
(what could I call it?) stubbornness or his ability to create emotional
distance that produced a different form of photography. It is the apolitical nature, the refusal of
what is “topical,” that gives Burckhardt’s work a strange transcendent
quality.
In
one eerie image a closed bank’s squarish shapes contrast and compliment brick streets,
granite walls, and dark linked boxes resemble a crazed Tetrus game. You notice the subject: parallel lines, horizons, shadows, and shade,
forgetting entirely the object being identified. These banks were engines of economic might
and individual prosperity but Burckhardt avoided the easy symbol of decline,
discovering instead the hidden contours of beauty. In New York, N. Why? Edwin Denby
contributed an illuminating poem. He
writes, “You can have the measurements O.K.ed, mailed,/Talk with the bank, and
get the building faced,/Carry it on the books, and when the firm’s failed/Pedestrians still go by the slabs as placed/…The
pavement and a standpipe do not move,/As if the mind shifts slower than people
do/And keeps widening the span between love and no love./ This widening like a history mystery/Is what Rudi’s camera takes in
the city (italics mine).” He writes
of a “disintegrating” city but shows how pedestrians continue as before between
“love and no love.” Within this emotional
segment is where Burckhardt’s camera “takes in the city.” In his art, the shapes and contrasts matter
far more than the Depression or its human consequences. This was photography, he seemed to be saying,
not journalism.
In
a photo like “Astor Place, New York 1947” he captures an isosceles patch of
neutral ground and two parallel crosswalks overseen by a toothsome fille draining a Coke. But what socially-oriented photographers like
Frank may highlight—the unseen or unacknowledged racial homogeneity, a mass
rendered powerless through alienation and consumerism—instead, through
Burckhardt’s particularity, becomes a balance between banal objects like an
anchoring billboard, a series of street dividers, and the antipodes of craning
lamp posts and striped buses. Its
meaning lies within a stolen moment of a playful human dance, an uncoordinated
piece of earth locked into a four cornered picture where so much geometric
order and so many chartered paths become clear.
Burckhardt need not have captured the socio-political extremes of
America in order to capture something new, something worth seeing.
In
the first quatrain from Blake’s poem “London” he writes, “I wander through each
chartered street, /Near where the chartered Thames does flow, /And mark in
every face I meet, /Marks of weakness, marks of woe.” In contrast to social photographers, Burckhardt
would sense and highlight the former couplet before the latter. The New York School artists were rejecting
the teachings of Europe famously embodied in de Kooning’s “I’m over it” essay
where he denies categorization and breaks with the past. Barnett Newman commented on this point, that
Abstract Expressionists “instead of making cathedrals out of Christ, man, or
“life,” are making them out of ourselves, our own feelings. The image we produce is the self evident one
of revelation, real and concrete, that can be understood by anyone who will
look at it without the nostalgic glasses of history.” The artists, he continues,” free from the
weight of European culture…are denying that art has any concern with the
problem of beauty and where to find it.
The question that now arises is how, if we are living in a time without
a legend or mythos that can be called sublime…and if we refuse to live in the
abstract, how can we be creating a sublime art?” (173).
Burckhardt’s
New York street oeuvre lacks the grandeur and social ambition of other
photographers. But it does, as Blake
wrote, “show you all alive the world where every particle of dust breathes
forth its joy.” The works are carefully
composed, giving a sense of magic and discovery in everyday life. The photos did not seek to show all of New York
with Miltonian rhapsody, “Family of Man” sentimentality, or Duchampian nihilism. They are, as Perl rightly points out about
similar abstract works, “Romantic” without devolving into Romanticism. Instead, Burckhardt “captures moments—New
York moments,” like a microbiologist searching for patterns in a helix. Thus his work, lacking the grandiosity of
other photographers, presents images that seem more playful, closer, ironic,
graspable, and according to critic Phillip Lopate, “warmer.” Burckhardt said that it took him two or three
years before he was ready to photograph New York City commenting, “I still had
the idea I had to show the whole thing.”
Perhaps on walks to come, new quotidian connoisseurs will reject such
illusions and simply search for the unseen in a new way.
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