Arnold Eagle
Arnold Eagle (1909-1992) learned photography in the early 1930s, worked as a photo retoucher, and bought his first camera in 1932. He cultivated a passion for documentary photography through his membership in the Film and Photo League, and in 1936 joined several others in establishing an independent Photo League devoted exclusively to still photography.
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Eagle produced extended documentary projects, including a portrait of the Orthodox Jewish community on Manhattan's Lower East Side; One Third of a Nation, a Works Progress Administration series depicting slum conditions in New York City; and a documentation of the vanishing elevated subway trains. He contributed photographs to Fortune and The Saturday Evening Post magazines throughout the 1940s and worked with Roy Stryker for Standard Oil of New Jersey.
Among his best-known bodies of work are his photographs for the Martha Graham Dance Company, a decade long endeavor begun in 1944. Eagle, who was cinematographer for Hans Richter's Dreams That Money Can Buy and Robert Flaherty's Louisiana Story, taught filmmaking for more than three decades at the New School for Social Research. A notable exhibition of Arnold Eagle’s work was held at ICP in 1990.
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The Immigrants
14 Dec 2017 - 27 Jan 2018The Immigrants A Group Exhibition of Works by Select Photographers December 14, 2017 – January 27, 2018 Issues relating to immigration have been front and center in the news, from...Read more -
Staff Picks VI
13 Jul - 25 Aug 2017Read more -
Land Lines
20 Jul - 28 Aug 2015Read more -
Staff Picks IV
11 Dec 2014 - 24 Jan 2015New York – Staff Picks IV, an exhibition of photographs selected by the staff of Howard Greenberg Gallery, will be on view at the Gallery from December 11, 2014, through...Read more
