Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/03/31
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This was posted on the PMA Newsline today: "In memoriam: Helen Levitt Helen Levitt, a major photographer of the 20th century who caught fleeting moments of mystery and drama on the streets of her native New York, died in her sleep at her home in Manhattan on Sunday. She was 95. Her death was confirmed to The New York Times <http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/30/arts/design/30levitt.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=Helen%20Levitt&st=cse> by her brother, Bill Levitt, of Alta, Utah. Helen Levitt was born on Aug. 31, 1913, in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, N.Y. Her father, Sam, a Russian-Jewish immigrant, ran a successful wholesale knit-goods business; her mother, May, was a bookkeeper before her marriage. Finding high school unstimulating, Levitt dropped out during her senior year. In a 2002 interview with The New York Times in her fourth-floor walk-up near Union Square, she said that as a young woman she had wanted to do something in the arts though she could not draw well. Her mother knew the family of J. Florian Mitchell, a commercial portrait photographer in the Bronx, and in 1931 Levitt began to work for him. With a used Voigtl?nder camera, she photographed her mother's friends. Through publications and exhibitions, she knew the documentary work of members of the Film and Photo League and of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans, and Ben Shahn. In 1935 she met Cartier-Bresson when he spent a year in New York. On one occasion she accompanied him when he photographed along the Brooklyn waterfront. She also trained her eye, she said, by going to museums and art galleries. In 1936, she bought a secondhand Leica, the camera Cartier-Bresson favored. Two years later, she contacted Walker Evans to show him the photographs she had taken of children playing in the streets and their buoyant chalk graffiti and they eventually became freinds. She helped Evans make prints for his exhibition and book "American Photographs." Both the quintessentially French Cartier-Bresson and the essentially American Evans influenced Levitt, says The New York Times. Cartier-Bresson had a gift for catching everyday life in graceful flux; Evans had a way of being sparingly direct with his subjects. Levitt credited Shahn, whom she had met through Evans, with being a greater influence than Evans. Photographs Shahn took of life on New York sidewalks in the 1930s have a gritty spontaneity. The late 1930s and early 1940s, Levitt created an astonishing body. She took her camera to the city's poorer neighborhoods, like Spanish Harlem and the Lower East Side, where people treated their streets as their living rooms. Fortune magazine was the first to publish her work, in its July 1939 issue on New York City, reports The New York Times. The next year her famous Halloween picture was included in the inaugural exhibition of the Museum of Modern Art's photography department. In 1943 she had her first solo show at the Modern. To support herself, Levitt worked as a film editor. Her friend Janice Loeb, a painter, introduced her to Luis Bu?uel, who hired her in the early 1940s to edit his pro-American propaganda films. By 1949, and for the next decade, Levitt was a full-time film editor and director. When Levitt returned to still photography in 1959, it was to work in color; she was among the first notable photographers to do so, says The New York Times. She was helped in this project by Guggenheim fellowships that she received in 1959 and 1960. Much of this early color work was lost when her apartment was burglarized in the late 1960s. In the 1990s she gave up color, saying the colors weren't always what she wanted. Levitt shunned the limelight and seldom gave interviews. (She did talk with National Public Radio's <http://www.npr.org> Melissa Block in 2002 and that interview <http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1136521> can be heard online.) Comprehensive surveys of her career were held at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York in 1980 and at the Laurence Miller Gallery in 1987. But she remained little known to the general public even as late as 1991, when the first national retrospective of her work was organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and traveled to major museums." ...Ken Lassiter