Berenice Abbott
Berenice Abbott (1898-1991) was born in Springfield, Ohio and attended Ohio State University. In 1918 she moved to New York and then Paris in 1923 where she was introduced to Man Ray, who hired her to be his photography assistant. Despite having no experience in photography, Abbott soon started to produce her own work, eventually opening a studio of her own. In 1926, Abbott had her first solo show, featuring dynamic portraits of the artistic and literary avant-garde.
Abbott had first encountered the work of Eugène Atget through Man Ray in 1925. Though Atget had been documenting Paris for three decades, he was long forgotten by the public by the time they became friends. The only known portraits of Atget were made by Abbott shortly before his death in 1927. She purchased more than 5000 negatives, glass slides, and prints of his work, returning to New York with the extensive archive she had amassed. She was fiercely dedicated to preserving Atget’s legacy over the next forty years. Abbott’s collection was ultimately acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in 1968.
Upon returning to the U.S. Abbott took on commercial assignments and taught photography at the New School for Social Research. She dedicated herself to documenting New York with the methodical vigor and passion Atget had previously given to Paris, shooting its streets, buildings, parks—and of course, its people. With the support of the WPA Federal Art Project from 1935 to 1939, she created the seminal the body of work, Changing New York, an extensive socio-historical record of New York’s vanishing past as well as the construction of its modern future. The results of the project were distributed to high schools, libraries, and various public institutions throughout the metropolitan area; to this day, Changing New York serves as an invaluable record of New York’s history.
Abbott then shifted her focus towards science. In the 1940s, she served as photo editor for Science Illustrated, and went on to photograph scientific principles and processes for the Physical Sciences Study Committee at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology in 1958, developing innovative techniques and mechanisms which enabled her to capture scientific phenomena. Easily her most creative and innovative work, her aesthetically elegant photographs of swinging pendulums, bouncing balls, and wave patterns lend understandable reality to the many complex concepts of physical science. In 1970, Abbott’s first major retrospective opened at the Museum of Modern Art. Her work has since been exhibited and acquired by many institutions throughout the world. Abbott lived in Maine from 1966 until her death.
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A Female Gaze
18 Jan - 16 Apr 2022NEW YORK CITY—Street photography—the thoroughly unpredictable and often magical framing of a moment—was embraced early in the 20th century by women photographers. A new exhibition at Howard Greenberg Gallery will...Read more -
It Was All a Dream
19 Nov 2020 - 6 Apr 2021It Was All a Dream Artists viewing the real world through an abstract lens. With work by: Berenice Abbott, Nadav Kander, Jungjin Lee, Saul Leiter, Ray K. Metzker, and Bruno...Read more -
Staff Picks VI
13 Jul - 25 Aug 2017Read more -
Berenice Abbott & Charles Marville
The City in Transition 27 Feb - 13 Apr 2014An exhibition of photographs by Berenice Abbott and Charles Marville will be on view at Howard Greenberg Gallery from February 27 – April 11, 2014. Documenting now vanished streets and...Read more
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Berenice Abbott
27 Feb - 12 Apr 2014Read more -
Scenes from the South 1936 - 2012
3 May - 1 Jun 2013Scenes from the South, 1936-2012 , an exhibition of thirty photographs interweaving historical and contemporary images made in the American South over more than 75 years, will be on view...Read more -
Selections From Private Collections
29 Apr - 1 Sep 2011Howard Greenberg Gallery is pleased to present Selections from Collections . Comprised of seminal photographs culled from important private collections, the exhibition features a selection of photographs by 20th century...Read more
