Haruki Murakami, Gregory Crewdson, Philip De La Corcia, Steve Jobs, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Richard Avedon, Alan Ball, Paul Thomas Anderson, Tadao Ando, Frank Lloyd Wright, John Wesley Powell, Terry Gilliam, Akira Kurosawa, Elmore James, Howlin' Wolf, Stevie Wonder, William Eggleston, Alfred Hitchcock, Robert Towne, Charlie Kaufman, Hajime Tachibana, Ken Burns, Sofia Coppola, Solomon Burke, Brad Anderson, Pablo Picaso, Paul Rand, Marisa Monte, Beck, Afrika Bambaataa, Mario Batali, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Hayao Miyazaki, Bernard Herrmann, Miles Davis, Spike Jonze, Norman Foster, Sonny Rollins, Elliott Smith, Herbie Hancock, Imogen Heap, Jonathan Ive, Jack Johnson, Giada De Laurentiis, Jon Brion, Gilles Peterson, Rufus Wainwright, Santiago Calatrava, Sarah Vaughan, Wes Anderson, Alfonso Cuaron
Helen Levitt, Photographer
New York, 1980 (Photo: Copyright Estateof Helen Levitt/Laurence Miller Gallery, New York) Helen Levitt, who died last week, at 95, made the life of the street come alive in her photographs. Pictures of children playing, standing on stoops in Spanish Harlem, or just lost in their own worlds vibrate with the secrets of existence, and the pleasures of the sidewalk. An American Henri Cartier-Bresson, she turned a world of strangers into our extended family.
via New York Magazine
April 12, 2009 in photography, social commentary, street | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)